This site is closed to new comments and posts.

Notice: This site uses cookies to function.
If you are not comfortable with cookies then please don't browse this website.

Loud Banging/Crashing Noise Over the East River — Brooklynian

Loud Banging/Crashing Noise Over the East River

Last night (1/15) myself and countless other residents of Greenpoint were shaken out of our homes by a series of loud crashing/exploding noises. They seemed to be eminating from Manhattan and went on for about ten minutes. Upon arriving at the waterfront, nothing seemed amiss and the noises ceased. Everyone returned home slightly perplexed. What was that noise? Does anyone know?

Comments

  • http://www.newsday.com/news/local/newyork/ny-nyboom175055462jan17,0,6579016.story?coll=ny-nynews-print

    Boom!! Con Ed: It's only steam
    BY JUSTIN R. SILVERMAN
    amNEWYORK

    January 17, 2007

    The roaring booms that rattled much of the East Side Monday night were set off by the release of steam after a malfunction at a Con Edison plant, the agency said yesterday.

    "The system worked just as it should have," Con Ed spokesman Chris Olert said. "At no time was there an explosion."





    Olert said that a generating unit tripped as it was being brought online, and the noise and steam originated from boiler safety valves.

    Those booms shook the area around the East 14th Street plant as neighbors worried the plant had suffered another explosion, as it did more than four years ago when tens of thousands of residents were left without power for about eight hours.

    Monday night, residents poured out of apartment buildings and gathered around the plant at the end of the street, where large blasts of steam could be seen shooting skyward at regular intervals.

    Firefighters and police blocked off the intersection of Avenue C and 14th Street but did not enter the plant. The FDNY does not enter Con Ed facilities unless the power company requests assistance.

    After about 30 minutes the tripped boiler was fully depressurized and the booms ceased.

    "Monday night was not as scary as in 2002, said Christopher J. Ryan, 37, a resident of Avenue C whose apartment overlooks the power plant, "but the noise was still pretty darn menacing."
Sign In or Register to comment.