A four-alarm fire in Chinatown has claimed the life of one person and left at least 21 injured, YWN has learned.
Firefighters are on the scene at 22 James Street battling the blaze that broke out just after 4 a.m.
According to officials, the fire started on the 4th floor of the 6-story building.
CBS 2 HD reports that some residents were rescued from fire escapes, while others have jumped from the building to escape the flames.
Firefighters had a difficult time neutralizing the flames because of the high morning winds.
The injured were taken to Bellevue Hospital and Beth Israel Medical Center.
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FDNY: Extension Cord Sparked Deadly Chinatown Blaze Death toll rises to 2
Residents did not have time to grab any belongings as the fast-moving fire forced them to leave the building as soon as they woke up.
A fire that ripped through a six-story apartment building in Chinatown early Tuesday was sparked by an extension cord in a bedroom, fire officials said.
FDNY officials said an extension cord sparked a deadly Chinatown blaze.
Word on the cause of the fire came as the death toll increased to two confirmed fatalities. The fire department says a 33-year-old woman died at a hospital Tuesday afternoon after being pulled from the burning building’s second floor. A 32-year-old man who was in the same apartment was pronounced dead earlier in the day.
Another 28 were injured, including four serious injuries. At least three people jumped from windows on the fifth and sixth floors to escape the blaze. Eight firefighters suffered minor injuries.
The Red Cross said 60 families — estimated at more than 200 people — were evacuated from the building and two others nearby and taken to a shelter. The agency was trying to find Mandarin interpreters because many of the residents speak only Chinese.
At its peak, 180 firefighters were deployed in the bitter cold battling the blaze, which started on the second floor at 22 James Street and quickly shot up through the building, said Fire Department Chief of Operations Patrick McNally.
At times, fire could be seen shooting out of the windows while smoke billowed near the roof.
“People were yelling and screaming from the fire escape. They were crying for help,” Mary Liu, 29, told the New York Daily News. “One lady jumped out of the building. It was chaos.”
Fire officials said three people jumped from windows, but all of them survived.
McNally said the fire was difficult to bring under control because the building _ like so many others in Chinatown _ is old and because there were strong winds fanning the flames. With the temperature hovering around 22 degrees and wind gusts up to 30 mph, fire officials said water from the hoses was freezing when it hit the ground.
By midmorning, the blaze was under control but the red-brick building was blackened from fire and smoke. McNally said the interior damage was extensive, with the roof and some of the floors partially collapsed. No other buildings were damaged.
Last month, a Buildings Department inspection found “defective/exposed” electrical wiring in ceiling fixtures throughout the building and violations were served, according to city records.
The building is on a short residential street near the Manhattan Bridge in the heart of Chinatown, not far from the main artery Canal Street, where vendors hawk everything from knockoff handbags to live frogs and bootleg DVDs.
Kathleen O’Keefe, a spokeswoman for New York Downtown Hospital, said eight people were brought into the hospital, one child and seven adults. One man was dead on arrival. Another was in critical condition and was transferred to the burn unit at Weill Cornell Medical Center. Of the remaining six, two were discharged.
Jacquelyn Gallo told the Daily News she was asleep when the fire broke out. She said she tried to open her windows but they were locked, so she ran into the hallway.
“The smoke was thick. I couldn’t see anything. I heard people screaming and crying. I felt the heat of the fire and I started to panic. I thought I was going to die,” she said.
Gallo said she went back into her apartment, forced open the windows and climbed on to the fire escape. She said about 15 people were on the roof.
“Everyone was helping everyone,” she said. “We climbed on the roof and jumped on the next building. It was about an 8-foot plunge.”