By Randy Furst, Rochelle Olson, PAT PHEIFER and Josephine Marcotty Star Tribune staff writers
In the subzero stillness of New Year's Day morning, an explosion and fire tore through a century-old building in the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood of Minneapolis, injuring at least 14 people — six critically — and destroying an immigrant-owned grocery store and the 10 apartments above it.
Family members and friends reported that three or four others known to have lived in the apartments have not been located and are feared dead.
Minneapolis Fire Chief John Fruetel said authorities don't know if all the residents are accounted for. Some made it out on their own, some had to be rescued with ladders and witnesses said others jumped from second- and third-floor windows.
Firefighters and investigators haven't been able to enter the building and likely won't until at least Thursday. Building inspectors were at the scene to assess the building's condition and determine whether it's safe to enter, Fruetel said.
It could be days or weeks before a cause is determined, he said at a news conference Wednesday afternoon.
The building is a total loss. By midafternoon, burned rafters, still billowing smoke, hung like wooden pickup sticks in the shell of the brick building. The second and third floors had collapsed. More than eight hours after the first report at 8:16 a.m., firefighters still directed two hoses full-force through what was once the roof of the building. Fruetel said crews would be at the scene well into the evening.
The building housed the Otanga grocery store. The apartments above it were apparently all occupied by single men, most of them East African immigrants, a resident said.