Firefighters responded to a hazmat situation in Center City Philadelphia, where a massive amount of foam covered an entire city block after it leaked from a PECO substation.
Several calls were made to police after 1 p.m. Saturday, reporting explosions inside a building around the 400 block of South Juniper Street.
Crews arrived to the find the fire suppression system had released a large amount of foam.
They say there was a problem at the substation, which caused a power outage, and then the foam began appearing.
“There was a fire alarm going on and I didn’t really think anything of it, and then I was just chillin’ in my bed and I heard this huge explosion,” said Mark Deluca, witness.
“Then all of a sudden what looked like giant soap bubbles started floating down in front of our house,” said Karen Saillant, witness.
Check this out in the left hand corner. Looks like explosion at PECO substation in Center City causing foam @6abc pic.twitter.com/QX97Qrv2y2
— Bob Brooks (@BobBrooks6abc) December 3, 2016
While a neighbor watched the foam flurry, he captured the explosion on his phone.
At this time, fire officials say they’re still investigating exactly what happened inside the substation.
We’re told the foam system inside triggers to prevent any fire from spreading, and it fills up the entire building immediately.
That’s why when crews first opened the doors it came gushing out, 6-7 feet high in some places.
“It was a little bit scary because there were a lot of them and there was a lot of wind,” said Saillant.
The good news is there are no reports of any injuries to residents or firefighters – just a lot of foam.
“There were just like two holes in the side of the building, and it just kept spewing out,” said Deluca.
PECO officials say 2,700 customers temporarily lost power. It has since been fully restored.
As a result of the power outage, there were several elevator rescues in the area.
Once under control, the piles and piles of flame-retardant foam was hosed down, and shoveled into storm drains.
Officials tell us it is not toxic or environmentally harmful.
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Images posted to social media reveal unusual scenes from Lombard and Juniper Street, which appear to have become inundated with snow white foam.
Apparently Philadelphia is a #SanctuaryCity for illegal foam as well. #PhillyFoampic.twitter.com/OYWqSWPhIK
— MPH (@PhillyPartTwo) December 3, 2016
The streets lead towards premises owned by the PECO energy. A company spokesperson told the Inquirer that the outage is not believed to be part of a “malicious act”.
#BREAKING: A hazmat incident involving a large amount of foam has Juniper/Lombard shut down. Action News has crews on the way. @6abcpic.twitter.com/A6cBH9gk46
— Chuck McDade (@Squared6abc) December 3, 2016
A WPVI-TV news report indicates that the flurry of foam was the result of a hazmat situation.
A tweet by chief inspector Joe Sullivan, of the Philadelphia Police Department, appeared to confirm that the foam was triggered by an explosion at the electrical facility.
@PhillyPolice@PhilaOEM@PhillyFireDept hazmat teams enroute transformer explosion that triggered release fire suppresion foam. First snow! pic.twitter.com/PupeJDdjHd
— Joe Sullivan (@PPDJoeSullivan) December 3, 2016
Substation explosion in Philadelphia. 3K+ without electricity. Bubbles flying everywhere #BubbleBlizzard2016pic.twitter.com/OaRlBsL75q
— Alana Bly (@BestBly) December 3, 2016