No Joy for firefighters called to another blaze at Cambridge factory
Published on
Jun 28, 2009
CAMBRIDGE - Flames lit up Soper Park this morning, as fire consumed much of a wooden pallet storage yard next door at 175 Beverly
St.
JC Pallets is inside the compound of the former Joy
Manufacturing factory, where vandals have repeatedly set fires over the
years -- and flattened an empty building there four years ago.
An
old house and factory building at 201 Beverly St. was under a "make
safe" order from city officials after two fires in April. The property
owner had security guards watching the site and city officials were
keeping an eye on it, too.
Story continues below map showing fire location.
View Firebugs target Cambridge factory in a larger map
A demolition permit was issued last month by city hall for the boarded up and partially collapsed buildings at 201 Beverly St. but it's unclear if any work had started.
City officials always feared fire in the adjacent pallet yard, because
flames could rapidly spread to adjoining buildings in the century-old
industrial district.
After the April fires, city officials inspected
the storage yard to ensure there were fire breaks between the stacks of
tinder-dry wood.
Firefighters were called by a passerby about 4
a.m. When the first of four trucks arrived, flames were shooting 15
metres in the air from hundreds of neatly stacked rows wood platforms.
Pallets are used to allow fork lifts to carry material inside factories, to delivery trucks and into stores.
There were no reports of injuries. It wasn't clear this morning where the fire started.
Embers were floating towards eastward on the wind toward the
Canadian Pacific Railway tracks as people started to gather in Soper
Park to watch the spectacle.
Firefighters used two ladder trucks
to pour water down on the inferno, with an occupied factory building
behind immediately behind them.
Waterloo
Regional Police blocked Beverly Street at Dundas Street to give
firefighters room to work and to protect water hoses laying on the road.
It took about 30 minutes to control the fire. It was a sea of
embers an hour later as firefighters moved in with hoses to snuff it. The were still busy at dawn, two hours later, as a light drizzle turned to rain.