A freaky flash fire in a mechanical room of a building on the Columbia-Presbyterian Hospital campus left a maintenance worker with burns over 70 percent of his body this morning. A little before 10 a.m. workers were cleaning a domestic hot water tank in a 22nd-floor room, when, suddenly, there was "a little bit of an explosion and a flash fire," according to an FDNY spokesman. City Room reports that vapors from the cleaning solution were ignited after someone turned on a halogen lamp inside the drained tank. Accidents are not uncommon with halogen bulbs, which can reach temperatures as high as 1000 degrees and easily ignite any combustible material nearby. While they are more energy-efficient than incandescent bulbs, some have called for them to be banned; two years ago a rash of fires in Australia prompted one firefighter to call halogens "a bloody nightmare." All three workers injured in today's blaze were rushed to Harlem Hospital. One worker injured his arms and hands when he tried to pull the first man out of the tank, and the third suffered respiratory injuries.





Halogen lamps have always made me nervous.
It's unlikely that the bulb itself was the culprit. It was probably a spark within the wiring of the lamp.
If they were already on the campus of Columbia-Presbyterian, why were they rushed to Harlem Hospital? Does Columbia not have facilities to treat burn victims?
The NYT blog clarifies some of the questions. http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/06/26/worker-burned-at-medical-school-building/?scp=2&sq=explosion,%20columbia&st=cse
This is a very unlikely incident.This seems to be a very disastrous nightmare. This should be a lesson that everybody should be careful in doing anything.
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