This from Eric Haak:
The following is a synopsis of Chicago’s 3-11 at 36th and Homan on Monday, April 28th. The building was a Red-X which, for those who are not from Chicago, means that the building has been deemed structurally unsound and potentially too dangerous for interior operations. I live only 2 miles from this incident and left the moment it was dispatched. Traffic was almost at gridlock as people stopped in the middle of the Stevenson Expressway to gawk
The fire building ran adjacent to the expressway and was only about 100 yards off the roadway. This building appeared to be divided into three sections, each separated by a fire wall. The main body of fire was in the center section so even though the building was a good 200+ feet long, the section that was involved wasn’t that large. Some fire did appear to get into the front section but never advanced very far. When I passed on the Stevenson, there was heavy fire blowing out all of the second story windows in that middle section. By the time I parked and found my way back to the building, the truss roof had already burned through and most of the fire and smoke had diminished.
There were two access points to this incident. One was off of 36th and Kedzie and the image of Engine 23 heading back towards the fire building gives you an idea of the lead out here. It was about 450 yards from where Engine 99 hooked up to the hydrant at that corner. The other access point was at the dead end off Homan at 37th Place. Engine 34 had hose stretched across the railroad tracks and both Engines 38 and 39 were pumping from hydrants in the neighborhood south of the fire building.
I spent most of my time on the north side along the expressway where companies operated from an interior yard. Tower Ladder 54 had their aerial up fairly early as they were positioned in front of the building. Squad 1’s Snorkel was brought into the west part of the yard and had to wait for hose to be stretched before they could go to work. Eventually 6-7-6 was brought into the yard as well and after several lengths of hose were stretched, it went to work for the first time on a Chicago structure fire.
Companies went in-line to the east of the incident with Engines 88, 99, 107, 109, 23, 123, and 65 all pumping. There was also a Level I Hazmat with this incident. Many companies worked throughout the night and did not leave the scene until daylight broke on Tuesday.

Eric Haak photo

Eric Haak photo

Eric Haak photo

Eric Haak photo

Eric Haak photo

Eric Haak photo

Eric Haak photo

Eric Haak photo
#1 by Al Whitlock on May 2, 2014 - 3:52 PM
Eric,
The old truck is not a CFD rig. Has anyone else seem this truck and maybe provide some information?
#2 by David on May 2, 2014 - 2:29 PM
When talking about the light wagons, is the big Ford C still in service, or they now use “just” the two small ones (9-1-3, 9-1-5)?!
#3 by Turk_WLF on May 2, 2014 - 9:38 AM
@ Admin,
Thank you for the quick response on my request.
#4 by Turk_WLF on May 2, 2014 - 8:44 AM
Does anyone have any more pictures of 9-1-5 (I think that’s the number) ‘the CFD Light Wagon’, This is my very 1st time seeing it.
#5 by Admin on May 2, 2014 - 9:22 AM
http://chicagoareafire.com/Div_9_D4_B15_28.html
https://chicagoareafire.com/blog/2011/12/chicago-3-11-alarm-fire-12-27-11/
#6 by Eric Haak on May 1, 2014 - 7:56 PM
Thanks Al. That must be a different warehouse as this one does not run up against the Orange Line. Is that an old Chicago rig that you are talking about?
#7 by Al Whitlock on May 1, 2014 - 6:10 PM
There is a warehouse that is visible from the CTA Orange line that has a old fire truck sitting in the loading dock area. Is this that warehouse? Eric thank you once again for the great photos. My favorite is the first one.
#8 by Karl on April 30, 2014 - 9:28 AM
David,
It’s just a different style. its reflexite, where the other trip is scotchlite. Its just two different materials.
#9 by David on April 30, 2014 - 7:47 AM
Anybody knows what kind of reflectors wears the guy on the 3rd photo?! Is this whole-lime a new standard or just some exception?! In my opinion this looks much better than the classic 3-stripe stuff.