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Squirrel Hill apartment building ravaged by stubborn fire | TribLIVE.com
Pittsburgh

Squirrel Hill apartment building ravaged by stubborn fire

Justin Vellucci
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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Carlos Carmona, senior disaster program manager with the American Red Cross, gives hugs to residents as Pittsburgh firefighters try to control a raging apartment fire on Tuesday in Squirrel Hill.
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Massoud Hossaini | TribLive
No injuries were reported Tuesday morning in this fire on Forward Avenue, but dozens of tenants stand to be displaced.
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Shane Dunlap | TribLive
Red Cross volunteers tend to elderly residents as crews battle the fire on Forward Avenue at an apartment building on Tuesday morning in Squirrel Hill.
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Massoud Hossaini | TribLive
Pittsburgh firefighters work to control the blaze.
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Justin Vellucci | TribLive
Plumes of dark gray smoke that could be seen from the Parkway East towered over Squirrel Hill Tuesday morning as firefighters battled a blaze at an apartment building on Forward Avenue.
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Justin Vellucci | TribLive
No one was injured in the blaze, but the building won’t be habitable again, according to Pittsburgh Public Safety.
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Justin Vellucci | TribLive
City of Pittsburgh firefighters battle a fire on Forward Avenue in Squirrel Hill on Tuesday.
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Justin Vellucci | TribLive
Smoke from the fire could be seen by motorists on the Parkway East.
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Massoud Hossaini | TribLive
The blaze drew a major response, with emergency medical staff joining 73 firefighters to battle the stubborn blaze, which raged for more than four hours.
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Massoud Hossaini | TribLive
The blaze drew a major response, with emergency medical staff joining 73 firefighters to battle the stubborn blaze, which raged for more than four hours.
8847059_web1_ptr-squirrelhillfire22-091025
Massoud Hossaini | TribLive
The blaze drew a major response, with emergency medical staff joining 73 firefighters to battle the stubborn blaze, which raged for more than four hours.
8847059_web1_ptr-squirrelhillfire20-091025
Massoud Hossaini | TribLive
The blaze drew a major response, with emergency medical staff joining 73 firefighters to battle the stubborn blaze, which raged for more than four hours.
8847059_web1_ptr-squirrelhillfire19-091025
Massoud Hossaini | TribLive
The blaze drew a major response, with emergency medical staff joining 73 firefighters to battle the stubborn blaze, which raged for more than four hours.
8847059_web1_PTR-SHFire205-091025
Shane Dunlap | TribLive
The blaze drew a major response, with emergency medical staff joining 73 firefighters to battle the stubborn blaze, which raged for more than four hours.
8847059_web1_ptr-fire14
Massoud Hossaini | TribLive
The blaze drew a major response, with emergency medical staff joining 73 firefighters to battle the stubborn blaze, which raged for more than four hours.

Dozens of Pittsburgh firefighters spent more than four hours Tuesday battling a stubborn blaze in a 30-unit apartment building in Squirrel Hill that displaced tenants and shot a massive tower of smoke into the sky that could be seen for miles.

No injuries were reported from the fire, which collapsed the roof and did major damage to the building in the 5600 block of Forward Avenue.

“I think it’s safe to say this building is never going to be habitable again,” Cara Cruz, a Pittsburgh public safety spokeswoman, told TribLive.

The blaze was reported at 8:25 a.m. and was under control at 1:08 p.m.

A total of 73 firefighters from 17 city companies responded to the scene, Pittsburgh fire Chief Darryl Jones told reporters around noon.

Eleven EMS workers and two doctors also responded, according to Cruz.

Jones said it was taking longer than usual to control the blaze because large interior parts of the 1929 building were made of wood.

Multiple portions of the three-story building had collapsed by noon. Dense patches of smoke sometimes made it difficult to see.

She estimated around 30 residents could be displaced from the apartments.

Public safety asked people to avoid the area.

Murray Avenue was closed between Forbes and Morrowfield avenues. Forward is closed between Murray and Beechwood Boulevard.

The ramp from Forward Avenue to westbound Interstate 376 was shut down, according to the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation.

A crowd gathered at an auto body shop on Forward to watch the scene unfold with news crews.

Building resident Matthew Stock said he heard a smoke alarm going off around 8:30 a.m. He thought it was a minor fire and left his one-bedroom apartment on the first floor in bare feet and without his cellphone.

“The next thing I knew firefighters are running up the stairs,” said Stock, 35, who has lived there about five years.

Stock sat near the mechanic’s garage across the street from the apartments around 11 am and watched along with fellow building residents as firefighters attacked the blaze.

“What do you think is the over/under on how much fire will damage the second floor?” asked Shalyn Faison, 22, a UPMC Shadyside hospital transporter who has lived in a studio apartment on the second floor for several years.

“I think we have to be more concerned with water damage,” Stock replied as at least four fire hoses shot streams of water into the gutted building.

Firefighters were still spraying water on the fire at 12:15 pm. Flames remained visible at that time.

American Red Cross volunteers were on scene to hand out water and help residents find a place to stay. The group set up a post at a nonprofit on Murray Avenue.

The ramp from Forward Avenue to westbound Interstate 376 has been shut down, according to the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation.

Justin Vellucci is a TribLive reporter covering crime and public safety in Pittsburgh and Allegheny County. A longtime freelance journalist and former reporter for the Asbury Park (N.J.) Press, he worked as a general assignment reporter at the Trib from 2006 to 2009 and returned in 2022. He can be reached at jvellucci@triblive.com.

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