
 
        
         
		One woman dead, 8 hospitalized in Fox Street explosion 
 BY ALIYA SCHNEIDER 
 A Bronx building exploded  
 at the corner of Fox and Tiffany  
 streets in the Longwood  
 section of the Bronx  
 around 10:53 a.m. Tuesday,  
 and offi cials are investigating  
 whether it’s related to a gas  
 scent reported earlier in the  
 morning. 
 The FDNY responded to  
 the 869 Fox St. two-alarm fi re,  
 which offi cials declared a major  
 emergency, within 4 minutes, 
  according to FDNY offi - 
 cials. 
 Firefi ghters sprayed water  
 at the three-story residence as  
 dark smoke emerged from the  
 windows and roof. 
 Approximately 200 fi re and  
 EMS personnel responded, according  
 to FDNY Chief John  
 Hodgens. 
 An  NYPD  spokeswoman  
 told the Bronx Times three civilians  
 and fi ve offi cers were  
 hospitalized,  as  of  1:40  p.m.  
 Tuesday.  
 Martha  Dagbasta,  a  
 77-year-old resident who was  
 transported to Lincoln Hospital  
 had died, and an 82-yearold  
 woman and 68-year-old  
 woman were in stable condition  
 at Lincoln. Three offi cers  
 were admitted to Jacobi Medical  
 Center and two offi cers to  
 Lincoln Hospital for smoke inhalation. 
 At a press conference  
 shortly before 4 p.m. on Tuesday, 
  Hodgens said the woman  
 who died was one of two sisters  
 who  were  inside  the  
 building  during  the  explosion, 
  and then found laying on  
 the ground outside. The surviving  
 sister is in serious condition, 
  he said. 
 Mayor Eric Adams said  
 police  offi cers carried out a  
 Firefi ghters respond to an explosion on Fox Street in the Bronx on the morning of Tuesday, Jan. 18.  Photos Lloyd Mitchell 
 woman who was trapped inside  
 a burning building next  
 door  to  the  explosion.  That  
 woman, 68, has serious injuries  
 but  is  expected  to  survive, 
  Hodgens said. 
 “This  tragic  and  frightening  
 event after the inferno  
 we saw just days ago just really  
 adds the pressure on the  
 Bronx and all those who have  
 experienced overcoming this  
 issue as it seems to continue  
 to unfold right now,” Adams  
 said  on  Tuesday,  referencing  
 the Jan. 9 fi re at Twin Parks  
 North West in Fordham  
 Heights, which killed 17, including  
 BRONX TIMES REPORTER, J 6     JAN. 21-27, 2022 BTR 
 eight children. 
 Bronx Borough President  
 Vanessa Gibson said she was  
 at the Fordham Heights site  
 when she learned about the  
 Longwood fi re. 
 “While the Bronx is no  
 stranger to fi res, we are going  
 to continue to work together  
 as a community to make sure  
 that we provide all of the services  
 that are necessary for  
 the homeowners and for the  
 residents,” Gibson said. 
 City Councilman Rafael  
 Salamanca Jr., whose district  
 encompasses Tuesday’s South  
 Bronx fi re  scene, had  said  on  
 Twitter during the fi re  that  
 the fl ames came from a gas explosion. 
  He tweeted an hour after  
 the fi re was reported that it  
 was still burning. 
 But whether the fi re  came  
 from a gas explosion is still under  
 investigation, Adams said. 
 Someone reported smelling  
 gas early Tuesday morning, 
  prior to the 10:53 a.m. explosion, 
  but offi cials want to be  
 confi dent before declaring the  
 cause, Hodgens said. 
 “We will be on scene operating  
 as we sift through the rubble  
 just to look for any type of  
 evidence,” the fi re chief said. 
 The building that exploded  
 and two adjacent connecting  
 buildings are all destroyed and  
 need to be demolished, Hodgens  
 said. Two nearby buildings  
 need structural work but  
 can be saved. 
 Adams said the gas was  
 shut off on the entire block and  
 the city wants to get it back on  
 as soon as possible, adding that  
 many seniors live in the area. 
 “The goal  is  to do an expeditious  
 but safe investigation  
 so we can get people back into  
 their homes,” Adams said. 
 Salamanca said many  
 buildings on the block burned  
 down in the ’70s and ’80s and  
 had been revitalized in the  
 late ’80s and early ’90s. “To see  
 these  fi res really breaks our  
 hearts and breaks our homeowners’ 
  hearts,” he said. “But  
 what I did see here today was,  
 as I was talking to homeowners, 
  they knew who and the  
 names of those individuals  
 that live in each and every one  
 of those homes.” 
 There was one man neighbors  
 thought went missing,  
 but they called his family and  
 learned he was in Puerto Rico,  
 Salamanca said. 
 St. Athanasius Church,  
 on Tiffany Street, opened its  
 doors to residents impacted by  
 the  fi re, and the Red Cross is  
 providing assistance. 
 Lt. Gov. Brian Benjamin  
 said he couldn’t believe it  
 when he heard another fi re  
 erupted in the Bronx, and that  
 he and Gov. Kathy Hochul will  
 ensure the state does everything  
 it can to help those impacted. 
 A mattress from inside the collapsing structure is among the remnants of the fi re.