David Neibert! Holy Crap! Your town is on fire!

I see a plant in ST. LOUIS is on fire and a two block area is being evacuated. Wow, things are exploding everywhere! Geez I hope you don't live near that place. :eek:
I see the company's name is P R A X A I R.
Anyone else in the area? :confused:
 
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Praxair is the second largest distributor of compressed gas. I don't think I need to say much about how bad it is that their place is on fire. :eek:
 
Yeah...it's a pretty major fire. That's the company we use for all our welding gas. I heard there were 200 ft fireballs and projectiles flying several blocks away and landing in parking lots or yards and starting more fires.

Since it's downtown, it doesn't affect Kurt or Me...that about 30 miles from our houses. Might screw up the basesball game tonight, because of the highway closing and big clouds of smoke.

David
 
Yep, it's a war zone down there. My dad and I were really close by there today, luckily we left the area before all of that started.

-Rod
 
I hope all of the workers there got out before it got bad. And if its as bad as it sounds, I doubt there are any firefighters in the middle of it. Or I hope not anyway.
 
Grims95SC said:
I hope all of the workers there got out before it got bad. And if its as bad as it sounds, I doubt there are any firefighters in the middle of it. Or I hope not anyway.

It has been confirmed on CNN that PRAXAIR has accounted for all of their workers. :cool:
 
(CBS/AP) A blaze at an industrial plant sent huge fireballs shooting into the sky Friday afternoon, casting a towering cloud of black smoke over the area as traffic backed up and nearby residents evacuated their homes.

There were no injuries, St. Louis Police Chief Sherman George said. There also was no word on the cause of the rapid-fire series of spectacular explosions at Praxair Distribution, which processes propane and other gases for industrial use.

Company spokeswoman Susan Szita Gore said she wasn't certain how many of the plant's 70 employees were there at the time of the explosions, but all were evacuated safely.

The explosions appeared to come from tanks outside the plant and from the plant itself. Cars and trucks parked nearby caught fire.

Firefighters held back at first before trying to battle the blaze as the blasts sent flames more than 150 feet in the air. The fire and smoke could be seen for several miles.

Occasional plumes of white smoke also towered up from the roaring fire, which appeared large but concentrated. It flared with bursts of energy every few seconds, suggesting chemicals — such as propane, which the Fortune 500 company Praxair packages — fueling the blaze.

"At the height of the event, it was just fireball after fireball rising into the air," said Chris Casey, an employee of Saint Louis University several blocks away. "It looked like movie pyrotechnics. I've never seen anything like it before."

Homes and businesses were being evacuated in the mostly residential area south of downtown, and major traffic backups caused by the fire delayed the start of the St. Louis Cardinals baseball game by a half-hour.

Police Chief Joe Mokwa said Interstate 64 was shut down near the site for fear that additional cylinders might explode. But by late afternoon, officials said they believed the materials had stabilized.

During the most intense period of the fire, Mokwa said, cylinders were "shooting 100 feet into the air."

The company is part of Praxair Inc. of Danbury, Conn. A spokesman had no immediate information on the fire.

The company's primary products are atmospheric gases such as oxygen, nitrogen, argon and rare gases, along with process and specialty gases like carbon dioxide, helium, hydrogen, semiconductor process gases and acetylene.

Leland Darrow, assistant area director of the Occupational Health and Safety Administration office in St. Louis, said he was not aware of any safety violations at the plant.

Mayor Francis Slay said the city was monitoring air at the site to make sure no hazardous materials were being released. "So far we have not detected any," he said.

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Praxair Plant Fire video
 
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Since none of the workers are hurt, I can now use a favorite Simpsons quote of mine:
"Arrggh, the goggles do nothing!" <-- must be done with a horrible Austrian accent.
 
Grims95SC said:
Since none of the workers are hurt, I can now use a favorite Simpsons quote of mine:
"Arrggh, the goggles do nothing!" <-- must be done with a horrible Austrian accent.

ROFL!!! :D
 
Since none of the workers are hurt, I can now use a favorite Simpsons quote of mine:
"Arrggh, the goggles do nothing!" <-- must be done with a horrible Austrian accent.

If it's the redheaded janitor that says that, it should be a horrible Scots accent :p
 
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