Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Failed electric cables blamed for Vancouver blast

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Jan, 2021 07:42 PM
  • Failed electric cables blamed for Vancouver blast

Electrical faults in underground utility cables set off a fire and a subsequent electric arc that the fire department says caused a three-metre crater in a new commercial area under Vancouver's Granville Street Bridge.

A statement from the department says fire investigators worked with officials from utility companies to determine that a fire in a car 30 metres away from the blast was also caused by the electrical faults.

The electrical arc set off an explosion that tore up large chunks of cement and damaged several nearby vehicles, but no one was hurt.

The department says traffic in the area will be affected during the cleanup and repairs to a utility vault.

The former industrial area has been redeveloped and includes grocery, drug stores, a bank, a private university, and a highrise apartment building.

Spinning Chandelier, a popular piece of public art that is near the blast, was not damaged.

MORE National ARTICLES

Firearms, Ammunition Seized And Three Males Arrested In Suspected “Straw Purchasing”: CFSEU

Firearms, Ammunition Seized And Three Males Arrested In Suspected “Straw Purchasing”: CFSEU
In late December 2020, information was received that led the CFSEU-BC Illegal Firearms Enforcement Team (IFET) to begin a firearm trafficking investigation into a suspected “straw purchaser”.

Firearms, Ammunition Seized And Three Males Arrested In Suspected “Straw Purchasing”: CFSEU

TransLink names interim CEO

TransLink names interim CEO
Chen-Kuo is currently TransLink’s General Counsel and Executive Vice-President of Corporate Services.

TransLink names interim CEO

B.C. police watchdog forwards report to Crown

B.C. police watchdog forwards report to Crown
A statement from the Independent Investigations Office says a man was seriously injured while being arrested by a Vancouver police officer on June 9, 2019.

B.C. police watchdog forwards report to Crown

COVID-19 cases rising again in Revelstoke, B.C.

COVID-19 cases rising again in Revelstoke, B.C.
The health authority says the cumulative total in the area is now "above 85 cases" since the start of the pandemic, up from 50 in early December.

COVID-19 cases rising again in Revelstoke, B.C.

B.C. homeowner grant raised by $100,000 this year

B.C. homeowner grant raised by $100,000 this year
The Ministry of Finance says the threshold for the 2021 homeowner grant has been set at $1.625 million, a $100,000 increase over last year.

B.C. homeowner grant raised by $100,000 this year

B.C. mink farmer destroys animals after COVID

B.C. mink farmer destroys animals after COVID
The first farm where the virus spread to mink also had eight workers who tested positive and Gunvaldsen says both farms remain under quarantine.

B.C. mink farmer destroys animals after COVID