A 2-11 Alarm fire today at 6730 South Shore Drive also required an EMS Plan II. The Chicago Tribune reports:
Two men died and a woman was seriously injured when an extra-alarm fire broke out in a high-rise on South Shore Drive this morning.
All three victims suffered full cardiac arrest, apparently from breathing in smoke, according to Fire Department spokesman Larry Langford.
One of the men was in his 30s and the other was in his 40s, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office. The first man was pronounced dead at 9:54 a.m. at the University of Chicago Medical Center and the other was pronounced later at Jackson Park Hospital, officials said.
The men were found on the seventh floor and the woman was found in the lobby of the building in the 6700 block of South Shore Drive, also in full cardiac arrest, Langford said. Paramedics were able to revive her with CPR and took her to the University of Chicago Medical Center, Langford said.
A firefighter suffered minor injuries, officials said.
The fire broke out around 8:40 a.m. and was quickly raised to a 3-11 alarm with a call for at least 10 ambulances, officials said. Firefighters on a ladder battled the blaze on the seventh floor while firefighters on another ladder tried to reach residents on balconies on the other side of the building.
Langford said the fire may have started in the bedroom of an apartment on the 7th floor. The blaze spread to an apartment on the 8th floor, he said. The fire was under control by 9:25 a.m
The fire department did not order an evacuation of the building, telling residents it was safer to stay in their apartments, Langford said. Firefighters then went door to door, checking on them.
Water from hoses and hydrants had turned to sheets of ice around the building. Dozens of fire trucks, ambulances and police cars lined South Shore Drive.
The entire article with video is HERE.
Several photos can be found HERE.
Another article is HERE.
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#1 by scott on January 24, 2013 - 3:38 PM
Most floors are 10ft, some 12′, some more. The average 100′ aerial usually makes the 8th floor as long as the set back (distance from the street to bldg) is an unsual long distance. This fire the bldg in relation to the street allowed for a good apparatus positioning for the TL & access.
#2 by JohnH on January 22, 2013 - 11:16 PM
For a standard residential high-rise like this one, approximately how high up are the seventh and eighth floors? Just curious if most of the CFD tower ladders and ladder trucks can easily reach that height. Seems that way from the photos…
#3 by Dennis on January 22, 2013 - 5:33 PM
It went to a 3-11.