Fire risk prompts high-rise evacuations
February 15, 2019Officials in Duisburg said its emergency housing office was ready to help evicted residents find temporary accommodation after two high-rises in the western German city were deemed unsafe. But city officials also said responsibility — including for the costs incurred — lay with the towers' owner, an Austrian concern, according to WDR public television.
If a fire broke out, residents would have found themselves in "acute" danger, said city hall in a statement, justifying its hurried intervention.
One resident said she had just learned that "I must leave my apartment — like all the other residents — within four hours."
"No one from the houses knows where they should go," said another resident outside the 12-story towers in Duisburg's Husemann Strasse.
Experts called in on Thursday to follow up on checks made last week had confirmed "considerable fire safety deficiencies," said Duisburg city building oversight official Andre Haack.
"There is a densely branched system of shafts that lead into individual apartments and stairwells, through which smoke can spread unhindered in the event of a fire," Haack told WDR.
The buildings' main entrance locks were changed by a locksmith to prevent unsupervised entry. In the coming days, residents would be allowed to return briefly to recover goods and possessions, WDR reported.
In its statement, Duisburg city administration said the towers' owner must provide "suitable substitute accommodation."
Grenfell disaster
High-rise safety across Europe was highlighted in June 2017 by London's Grenfell Tower fire that killed 72 people and was blamed on flammable external paneling.
Read more: Wuppertal evacuates tower block over Grenfell-like cladding
Duisburg in 2010 was the scene of Germany's fatal Love Parade that claimed 21 lives and left more than 650 attendees injured by a stampede at a music festival.
Duisburg in September last year ordered precautionary high-rise evacuations of two families when it found a fire ladder height-limit had been exceeded.
In September 2017, Dortmund — like Duisburg in the Ruhr District — evacuated 400 households from the so-called "Hanibal" tower complex, citing fire safety risks.
Renovations costing millions are still pending in Dortmund.
ipj/sms (dpa, WDR)