City street sealed off after 'explosion'

原文链接: http://www.cnblogs.com/moncler0089/archive/2010/12/04/1896155.html

air max plus tnA PROBE was continuing last night into a the cause of an incident which led to Dublin's O'Connell Street being sealed off yesterday. Staff at Kylemore Cafe, located on the corner of O'Connell Street and Talbot Street, escorted upwards of 20 customers from the building after what appeared to be an explosion in the basement. No one was injured in the incident, which occurred around midday. Subsequently there were conflicting reports about the nature of the incident. Gardai sealed off O'Connell Street outside as the crew of four fire brigades and officials from Bord Gais examined the building. Paul Elebert, district officer with Dublin Fire Brigade, said there had been an explosion in the basement. "At the moment we don't know what caused it, it requires investigation. There was nobody injured." The building remained closed as an engineer from Dublin City Council's examined it. "The explosion damaged a wall down in the basement," Mr Elebert said. Safety inspectors from Bord Gais Networks last night said the incident was not gas related. A spokesman said there was no evidence of a gas leak at the site and there were no reports of gas leaking in the area. They had been called out in response to a suspected gas explosion. "However, it now appears that there was no explosion and the incident was in fact the collapse of a basement wall," the spokesman said.nike tuned shoes Gas fitters found the pipes had been functioning normally at the time. Richard Seville, a salesman at the Suit Company on O'Connell Street, said they heard a "little bang" and then spotted staff evacuating people. EARLY ARRIVALS: THREE OF the country’s newest citizens came close to being born in a snow-bound house in the mountains after deciding to arrive two weeks early. Aaron, Finn and Ryan Hayden-Freeman were born on Wednesday morning at Wexford General Hospital – but only following a dramatic few hours after their mother Mandy Hayden-Freeman woke up with labour pains at 5am. A quick look out the window of the family’s home in Ballindaggin revealed seven inches of snow on the mountainous surrounds and Mandy and husband John realised they had a job on their hands to travel the 25 miles to Wexford. “I was booked into Holles Street for December 15th to have a Caesarean section but they decided they weren’t going to wait that long,” Mandy said yesterday of her impatient new sons. “There was a bit of a panic yesterday morning.”nike tn shoes online John contacted the emergency services and, while they tried to organise a helicopter, two regular ambulances and two with four-wheel-drive set off to the isolated spot near Kiltealy in the Enniscorthy area. “It was fairly hairy at one stage. I thought I was going to have them in the house,” Mandy said. Eventually one of the ambulances reached the house, with two midwives on board, and got the expectant mother to Wexford at about 8.15am. Little over half an hour later, Aaron made his first appearance, followed three minutes later by Finn and, after another minute, Ryan. The couple have a daughter, Chloe, who will celebrate her ninth birthday next week. The triplets weighed 4lb 4oz, 4lb 1oz and 3lb 15oz, respectively and, while perfectly healthy so far, will spend the coming weeks in the hospital’s special care unit because of their size and arrival after 32 weeks of pregnancy.cheap nike tn shoes “They’ll be there for Christmas,” said Mandy, who is due to be discharged on Sunday or Monday. She is originally from Tallaght in Dublin, and John is from Enniscorthy.

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