
Photo by Sile Moloney
A report of a fire on Sunday, June 7, at a hospital in Norwood was unfounded, according to the FDNY.
Following the circulation of a social post advising of the fire, Norwood News reached out to the FDNY and a department spokesperson said the fire department received a call at 11.52 a.m. on Sunday for a report of a fire at 3424 Kossuth Avenue, the address for NYC Health + Hospitals/North Central Bronx, located between DeKalb Avenue and East 210th Street.

Photo by Miriam Quiñones
According to the spokesperson, emergency units investigated the incident and found no condition at the location and it was deemed to be “an unwarranted alarm” and the incident was closed at 12.04.
As reported, the cause of the fire at 660 East 187th Street in Belmont on April 21 was deemed to be accidental. Read our prior coverage of the fire here, here, here, here, here, here and here.

Photo courtesy of NYC Water
Sign up for a free smoke alarm here.
Click here to read FDNY’s fire safety tips. “During a fire, always close the door behind you!” fire officials say. “It helps contain smoke and flames, giving you precious time to escape.”

Photo courtesy of NYC Water
Read our latest coverage of the fatal fire at 2609 Bainbridge Avenue in which three young children from the same family died here.
Meanwhile, a fire hydrant appears to have been dismantled at 2914 Jerome Avenue in Bedford. It’s located right in front of a large residential building. A 311 complaint has been logged.

Photo courtesy of NYC Water
The FDNY encourages New Yorkers to use spray caps to open hydrants. “If you’d like to cool off with a hydrant, make sure you do it safely and legally, using a spray cap,” an extract from the NYC Department of the Environment (DEP) website reads. “When hydrants are opened without a spray cap, they can use 1,000 gallons of water per minute (or more), reducing water pressure in the surrounding area, making it harder for the fire department to fight fires when necessary.”
*Miriam Quiñones contributed to this story.

