Spotted a hydrant behind a commercial strip today, but then noticed something else. Would you position your apparatus behind this structure during a working fire? The retaining wall on the right becomes taller as it bends out of site, finally topping out at 20 feet in height. It extends to the other end of the block.
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It is.
Definitely looks like you'd be well inside the collapse zone in the "canyon" created by the retaining wall on the one side and the structure on the other. The hydrant is in a good place judging by the shadows, it's at the corner of the row of buildings.
If the place is on fire and it makes sense to attack from the rear would you really not park there because of the collapse zone? This isn't some lightweight construction house.
Aerial photo required please Norm. Or give us a link to Google Earth.
We all comment depending on what we are used to, what we train with. For me, without having a better look I'd be viewing the construction as pre-cassed conrete slabs, Tilt-slab construction. We wouldn't be putting trucks anywhere near the buildings.
Sorry it took me so long to catch your comment. Go to Google maps and paste the name of the street that runs behind the strip shown in the photo. I was east of the S curve in the alley looking west...
Thanks for that Norm - it all helps. Pretty good access from east, west and south, and a pumper near the hydrant, yes. I still wouldn't be putting a vehicle up that alley next to tilt-slab buildings.
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