< Back to front page Text size +

Careless disposal of cigarette blamed for $3m Boston harbor fire

Posted by John Ellement  May 4, 2011 01:40 PM
  • E-mail
  • E-mail this article

    Invalid E-mail address
    Invalid E-mail address

    Sending your article

    Your article has been sent.

E-mail this article

Invalid email address
Invalid email address

Sending your article

Your article has been sent.

A worker who tossed a lit cigarette from a second-floor deck sparked a three-alarm fire that destroyed a Commercial Wharf office building perched on wooden pilings in Boston Harbor, the Fire Department said this afternoon. Damage was estimated at $3 million.

loading video... (please wait a moment)

Five firefighters were injured fighting the blaze that required the use of the department’s fire boat and about a dozen rescue divers, who got into the harbor so they could direct fire hoses onto the burning wooden pilings underneath the building, said department spokesman Steve MacDonald.

“The employee was working late into the night and would go out onto the second floor balcony for a cigarette break,’’ MacDonald said, summarizing what the unidentified worker told fire investigators.

MacDonald said investigators reached the conclusion that cigarette disposal was to blame after studying the burn pattern of the property and eliminating all other possibilities, such as malfunctioning utility systems.

“The cause was careless disposal of the cigarette,’’ MacDonald said.

He said it was not clear if the fire was started by improper disposal of just one cigarette, or multiple cigarettes. However he said, a single, still-burning cigarette could easily be responsible for the fire and the building's destruction.

“The place is a total loss and the property owners are going to have to make some decisions about the building itself,’’ said MacDonald.

MacDonald said the first alarm was struck around 5:15 a.m., and the arriving companies immediately struck a second alarm. A third alarm quickly followed, he said. The five firefighters suffered minor injuries.

With the noise of smoke alarms still sounding in the background, attorney Steve Lyons described how he learned his office was destroyed, taking with it the files and mementos he had amassed over a 31-year legal career.

“I live nearby and this morning I woke up and looked out from my balcony and saw my office in flames,’’ Lyons said in a calm but sad voice. “So I came down here, unfortunately to find my office totally engulfed and all the offices around it in flames.’’

"What I found out is that everything appears to be a total loss, 31 years of work. But everybody is safe and no one was hurt. That’s what I found out," he said.

The main occupant of the building was the Sarrouf Corso law firm, according to MacDonald.

Lyons said his goal is to rebuild his professional life.

“My plan is to salvage what I can and to save what I can of my clients' records, and rebuild,’’ he said. “But unfortunately, it looks like it’s not going to be an easy task.’’

  • E-mail
  • E-mail this article

    Invalid E-mail address
    Invalid E-mail address

    Sending your article

    Your article has been sent.

On the beat

Reporter Patricia Wen is covering the decision by Suffolk prosecutors to drop rape charges against Max Nicastro.
Patricia Wen
TALK TO US
breakingnews@globe.com | Twitter | 617-929-3100
loading video... (please wait a moment)
archives

LOCAL BLOGS

BOSTON AREA

Universal Hub

A collection of writing from hundreds of Boston-area bloggers.

The Chinatown Blog

Stories and events related to Boston's Chinatown and the Asian American community in Massachusetts

CommonWealth Magazine

Politics, ideas, and civic life in Massachusetts

Red Mass Group

News and commentary about Massachusetts and beyond

Blue Mass Group

Politics in Massachusetts and around the nation

Boston 1775

History, analysis, and unabashed gossip about the start of the American Revolution.
COLLEGE NEWSPAPER SITES

The Berkeley Beacon

The weekly student newspaper at Emerson College

The Daily Collegian

The student newspaper of UMass-Amherst.

The Daily Free Press

The independent student newspaper at Boston University

The Harvard Crimson

The nation's oldest continuously published daily college newspaper.

The Heights

The independent student newspaper of Boston College

The Huntington News

The independent student newspaper of Northeastern University

The Suffolk Journal

Suffolk University's student-run newspaper

The Tech

MIT's oldest and largest newspaper

The Tufts Daily

The independent student newspaper of Tufts University