Fire flared up again Friday at a cold-storage facility in Boyle Heights, sending a mixture of black and white smoke billowing from the building as firefighters battled flames that flared up inside a freezer container.
The blaze began shortly after 2:30 p.m. Wednesday in the 1400 block of South Los Palos Street and was declared contained that evening, but reignited after firefighters discovered a pocket of fire inside a freezer container within the building.
Firefighters on Friday were again battling the blaze and conducting overhaul operations as smoke continued to rise from the damaged structure.
At around 4:45 p.m. on Friday, changing winds re-ignited hot spots inside the building, which had continued smoldering since a fire earlier this week burned across the facility’s solar-panel-covered roof, according to fire officials. The Los Angeles Fire Department said crews had been pre-positioned in anticipation of the changing conditions.
Shelter-in-place orders that had been reissued Thursday were lifted Friday as smoke from the fire slowly dissipated.
Shortly after 2:30 p.m. Thursday, the Los Angeles Fire Department announced it was beginning to ventilate the building, releasing smoke from inside the building. As a result, the LAFD again reissued a shelter-in-place order affecting residents and businesses in an area stretching south of the 101 Freeway to roughly Washington Boulevard, east of Lorena Street and west of Indiana Street.
Residents were advised to close their windows and doors and turn off window-mounted air conditioning and heating units.
Although the order was originally expected to remain in effect for only a few hours, it continued into Thursday, with crews encountering pockets of fire still burning in a freezer container inside the structure. That fire added to the smoke emanating from the building, and work to fully douse those flames and vent the building continued into Friday.
At about 11:30 a.m. Friday, the LAFD lifted the shelter-in-place order, with the smoke dissipating.
Evacuation information can be found here.
“Although smoke in the area has decreased, individuals with sensitivity to smoke should continue to monitor (Air Quality Management District) air quality alerts and avoid unnecessary exposure to outdoor air,” the LAFD advised in a statement.
A Particle Pollution Advisory issued by the AQMD at 5 p.m. Wednesday was initially scheduled to expire at 10 a.m. Thursday, but was first extended through Friday and later extended again through 12:30 p.m. Saturday.
The fire on Wednesday rapidly spread across solar panels on the roof of the 491,000-square-foot warehouse, while an ammonia leak developed inside the building and thick smoke billowed into the air, prompting shelter-in-place orders for nearby residents and businesses on Wednesday.
The intensity of the flames and heightened danger posed by the ammonia leak forced LAFD crews to pull away from the structure and assume a defensive posture, pouring water on the building from the exterior.
As the fire spread, LAFD hose lines were unable to reach parts of the blaze, so at least three water-dropping helicopters were brought in to help halt the flames, dumping thousands of gallons of water onto the building.
LAFD Chief Jaime Moore called it a “very unique” situation for crews to use water-dropping helicopters for a structure fire, but the size of the warehouse necessitated the aerial operation.
Moore said he has been with the LAFD for 31 years, and it was only the second time he could recall aerial water drops being used to battle a structure fire. The previous incident occurred about six years ago in Echo Park.
About 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, fire officials reported that the spread of the flames on the roof had been halted, and the original shelter-in-place order was lifted Wednesday night.
No injuries were reported. It was unclear what sparked the blaze.
The solar panels on the same building also caught fire in August 2024, but LAFD crews were able to douse that blaze in less than an hour with no injuries.
According to the Lineage website, the facility offers cold storage, customs brokerage, drayage and blast freezing. The facility “is built to handle high-volume inventory and streamline … global cold chain from production floor to international delivery.”