Video: Three Dead as Explosion Rips Through Indiana Neighborhood, Damages Nearly 40 Homes
© Screenshot/Jordan14NewsScreenshot captures aftermath of an explosion that took place in Evansville, Indiana, on Wednesday, August 10, 2022.
Subscribe
Neighbors who felt and heard the as-yet-unexplained blast told local media they “thought a tree had fallen on us–or a car crashed into the building.”
At least three people are dead after a house exploded, damaging around 40 other homes in Evansville, Indiana, local authorities reported Wednesday.
FIRST LOOK at the explosion, caught on security footage at ABK Alarms Inc. @14News pic.twitter.com/dqJeksrUyl
— Jordan Yaney (@Jordan14News) August 10, 2022
Local residents fled in fear after the blast rocked the Evansville neighborhood just before 1 p.m. local time, according to the Evansville Courier & Press. Photos on social media show shrapnel, wooden boards, and building debris littering North Weinbach Avenue hours after the massive explosion unfolded.
Another look at the N Weinbach explosion in #Evansville. This one is of the actual site of the blast. The home has been reduced to complete rubble. You can see an adjacent home split in half.
— Valerie Lyons (@VLyonsTV) August 10, 2022
🎥: Drew Strader
Warning: Language pic.twitter.com/JGYM01hgQ8
Unreal devastation in Evansville today due to an explosion on Weinbach Ave. #evansville pic.twitter.com/WwF32sKVce
— Aaron Santini (@AaronRadioGuy) August 10, 2022
The blast had an astonishing radius of about 100 feet, according to Evansville Fire Department Chief Mike Connelly. While it’s still unclear what caused the incident, Connelly told local media there is no need to evacuate the rest of the neighborhood at present.
However, the fire chief did indicate some houses are “too unstable to enter.” At least 11 of the 39 homes damaged in the explosion are now "uninhabitable.”
Connelly said the search for survivors is ongoing as there could still be “other victims” at this time.
As many as 1,000 nearby homes lost power in the aftermath of the blast, and over a hundred reportedly remained without power several hours later.
CenterPoint Energy, the electric and gas utility responsible for the region, wrote in a statement that “the investigation of this incident continues.”