Update: Frat fire cause unknown; damage estimated at $750,000

Samara Kalk Derby  —  5/14/2008 10:47 am

Instead of cramming for finals, 25 members of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity sat on a Metro Transit bus early this morning at the corner of Langdon and Frances streets keeping warm as dozens of Madison firefighters battled a massive fire that enveloped their fraternity house.

The fire department got the first call at 11:41 p.m. Monday after a city of Madison police officer noticed a glow that she thought was a grill at the back of the house, said Madison Fire Department spokeswoman Bernadette Galvez. When the officer investigated she found that the back of the house was on fire, Galvez said.

"It's good to know everybody's out and safe," she said at the scene as the firefighters behind her pumped 1,000 gallons of water a minute into the top level of the three-story wooden house at 237 Langdon St.

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Fire Chief Debra Amesqua ordered all of the firefighters to leave the house because she feared structural collapse, Galvez said.

"A lot of fire was coming out of that building," she said. "Once fire gets into the attic, that's free space for it to burn."

The fire was put out about 3 hours later, at 2:38 a.m. A cause won't be determined for a few days, Galvez said.

Damage is estimated at $750,000.

By late afternoon investigators from both the Police and Fire Departments were still on the scene and Fire Department spokesman Eric Dahl said detectives had spent much of the day looking at the fire damage to the structure and took samples from the building to be sent to the crime laboratory. Such samples can show a fire was intentionally set, but can also eliminate such suspicions. As of now, Dahl, said, fire investigators have given no cause for the fire and no indication that it is suspicious in nature.

Police officers sealed off Langdon Street at Frances Street, so spectators wouldn't get in the way of the firehoses. About 100 onlookers, mainly students, gathered at the corner. Dozens more congregated in front of the Campus Inn, where the bus was parked sheltering the fraternity brothers.

The street remain closed through most of Tuesday, but was reopened before the afternoon rush started, Dahl said. Three fire fighters were injured fighting the fire, none seriously, and all had been released from hospitals by Tuesday afternoon, Dahl said.

Police officers sealed off Langdon Street at Frances Street, so spectators wouldn't get in the way of the firehoses. About 100 onlookers, mainly students, gathered at the corner. Dozens more congregated in front of the Campus Inn, where the bus was parked sheltering the fraternity brothers.

Langdon Street was still blocked by fire equipment at 6 a.m. Madison police said the street will most likely be blocked through the morning commute, so motorists should use alternate routes.

"It's still smoldering," said Division Chief Arthur Price. "There's still smoke and steam coming out of it."

Price said it was hard to say just how long firefighters would remain on the scene.

"It's an old, Victorian building," Price said, "with a lot of nooks and crannies. We want it out."

The Madison fire Department sent 14 vehicles to the fire and a total of 48 personnel, including chiefs, Galvez said. One firefighter suffered a non-life-threatening injury and was taken to UW Hospital, another suffered from dehydration and exertion, she said, while another had a sprain.

The Sigma Phi Epsilon house, built in the 1890s, is nestled into the bend on Langdon Street. Emergency workers evacuated the two buildings on either side of the house, neither of which were damaged by the blaze. Residents of the neighboring buildings were allowed back in at 3 a.m..

The 13-bedroom house was completely repaired after a fire in the summer of 1999 that caused $500,000 in damage. Because it was summer, there were only six residents and one guest staying at the house at the time.

"This is the different in that it's a total loss," said Ryan Sugden, vice president for the Sigma Phi Epsilon alumni board, who lived in the house from 2003 to 2005. This time, there were 25 fraternity members living in a house that at maximum occupancy can house 30, Sugden said.

"It's a total loss. Nothing will be recovered from that house," he said.

Sugden said that after the 1999 fire a new fire alarm system was installed in the house. "That played a role in getting all the residents out safely," he said.

The building did not have a sprinkler system, he said, a fact pointed out by Galvez, the fire department spokeswoman, who said that all newer construction student housing have sprinkler systems.

Ald. Eli Judge, who represents the UW campus and lives across the street, began to smell smoke and hear sirens at 11:50 p.m. He went outside and saw the back of Sigma Phi Epsilon on fire.

"Almost immediately, fire trucks started pulling up. I think the fire department's done a remarkable job tonight, especially with the nature of these old houses in the Langdon area," he said.

As a student, Judge sympathized with the fraternity members. "It doesn't help that it's the middle of finals week," he said.

Sugden noted that more than half of the victims have finals Tuesday.

UW-Madison Dean of Students Lori Berquam was also concerned about the impact of finals week and pointed out that the victims will not be able to access the materials they need to study.

"Most of them were only able to get out with the clothes on their back, maybe their bookbag, so we wanted to certainly support them during this terrible situation and give them the resources that they need to carry on," she said.

Berquam said the fraternity members all indicated that they had friends to stay with immediately and didn't need Red Cross support. "Where they will be staying in the coming days, that we need to work on," she said.

Argyle Wade, associate dean in the Offices of the Dean of Students, said his office will issue checks from the "Student Crisis Loan Fund," a fund established for emergencies through private donations. The fraternity members will be able to purchase what they need -- clothing, food, housing and other basic essentials -- to get them through finals, Wade said.

His office will also be contacting the students' professors to ask for further assistance in helping the victims complete their class work for the rest of the semester. Health services and counseling services on campus will also continue to make resources available, he said.

"Beyond that, it's working one-on-one. Each student will have unique needs," Wade said.

The fraternity made news last week as UW-Madison officials investigated a possible reverse hazing incident at the frat in which human excrement and vomit were dumped on fraternity members.

Sugden said he was grateful for all the help and concern at the scene. "The support from the community -- from the dean of students, students, the Red Cross, Madison police and fire -- has been overwhelming and very much appreciated," he said.

He said that for the hundreds, if not more than 1,000, "Sig Eps" who have lived in the house and used it as a fraternity home for the past 10 or so years, the house holds a lot of history and memories.

"It's a tough loss for us, but thankfully everybody is out safely. That's the most critical aspect of this."

The Capital Times' Bill Novak and Mike Miller contributed to this report.


Samara Kalk Derby  —  5/14/2008 10:47 am

Fire totally destroyed the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity house at 237 Langdon Street.

Mike DeVries/The Capital Times

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Fire totally destroyed the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity house at 237 Langdon Street.

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