- Summerland disaster
__NOTOC__The Summerland Disaster occurred when a
fire spread through the Summerlandleisure centre in Douglas on theIsle of Man on the night ofAugust 2 ,1973 . Fifty-one people were killed and eighty seriously injured.Background
Summerland was opened on the 25th of May 1971. A climate-controlled building covering 3.5
acre s (14,000 m²) on Douglas's waterfront, it had convert|50000|sqft|m2|abbr=on of floors and cost £2 million GBP. It was designed to accommodate up to 10,000 tourists and offered adance area, five floors of holiday games,restaurant s and a public bar. It was a 1970s concrete design. It had an advanced controlled internal climate, and was built with novel construction techniques, using newplastic materials. The street frontage and part of the roof were clad in a frosted translucentacrylic glass sheeting calledOroglas .Fire, materials and design
The fire started around 7:30 pm in a small kiosk adjacent to the centre's mini-golf course. Eventually the burning kiosk slumped against the exterior of the building. The
acrylic sheeting proved highlyflammable and the fire spread quickly across the sheeting on the leisure centre walls and roof, and through vents which were not properly fire proofed. The acrylic melted, which allowed moreoxygen to enter and dropped burning melted material, both starting other fires and injuring those trying to escape. The interior sound-proofing material was also particularly flammable and the building's design included many unblocked internal spaces that acted as chimneys adding to the conflagration.Delay and disorganisation
The fire services were not called for almost thirty minutes, and even then the call did not originate from the centre. Instead the emergency call came via the captain of a ship located two miles (3 km) out at sea who radioed HM Coastguard and said "It looks as if the whole of the Isle of Man is on fire". The Coastguard immediately called the fire brigade.
There was no attempt to evacuate the 3,000 people present until the visible evidence of the flames prompted a
panic -stricken mass rush for the exits, where many people were crushed and trampled because of the locked doors. Because of the lockedfire door many people headed to the main entrance, which caused a crush.The first responding fire crews immediately realised additional resources would be required and every last resource in the
Isle of Man Fire and Rescue Service was mobilised to the incident.Aftermath
51 people died in the fire. The number of fatalities was worsened by the failure of power supplies and emergency generators, inadequate ventilation and locked fire doors. The death-toll brought about a
public inquiry which ran from September 1973 to February 1974. No specific individuals or groups were blamed and the deaths were attributed to misadventure: the delay in evacuation and the flammable building materials were condemned. Changes tobuilding regulations to improve fire safety were introduced. The centre was seriously damaged by the fire. It was demolished, rebuilt on a smaller scale, and re-opened in 1978. It closed in 2004 and final demolition started in October 2005. The east wall currently remains intact as there is concern that its removal might cause the cliff to collapse.ee also
*
Stardust disaster External links
* [http://www.iomfire.com/main/Summerland.htm Isle of Man fires website] with pictures
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/august/2/newsid_2526000/2526967.stm BBC On this day] Memorial
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/witness/august/2/newsid_3117000/3117063.stm BBC On this day] Witness
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