New York City

Transformer Explosions Near World Trade Center Send Booming Sounds Through Lower Manhattan: Officials

One person was hurt in the twin explosions, fire officials say

A pair of transformer explosions sent loud booming sounds through lower Manhattan, officials said. Checkey Beckford reports. (Footage credit: @peacefrog/Instagram).

What to Know

  • One person had minor injuries following a pair of transformer explosions in lower Manhattan on Thursday afternoon, officials say
  • The blasts sent booms through lower Manhattan, causing some to take to social media in concern
  • The causes of the blasts weren't immediately available, but such blasts are not uncommon following snowstorms in the city

A pair of transformer explosions sent loud booming sounds through lower Manhattan on Thursday afternoon, officials said. 

Fire officials said the blasts were caused by a pair of underground transformers that exploded at Nassau Street and Maiden Lane between 4 p.m. and 5 p.m. The blast sites are steps away from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and just two blocks from the World Trade Center complex. 

Witnesses said that the rear end of a car on Nassau Street was lifted off the ground by a manhole that shot out of the ground in the first of the blasts. Social media videos showed the man standing on his own as he was checked out before being taken to the hospital. He was released a short time later.

Another witness, James Rizzo of Brooklyn, at the scene said a manhole went flying about 20 feet in the air after the second blast.

"It was a big explosion," Rizzo said.

He added, "It sounded like a bomb."

Social media users first reported hearing the blast shortly after 4 p.m.; NYPD spokesman J. Peter Donald confirmed the explosions were not nefarious in nature a few minutes later.

Then, at about 5 p.m., the NYPD's First Precinct tweeted there had been a second blast on the same block.

The Federal Reserve Bank was evacuated after the blast, according to officials, as were lower levels of two nearby buildings that registered elevated carbon monoxide readings after the explosions. 

The exact cause of the explosions wasn't immediately available, but subterranean fires and explosions aren't uncommon in New York City following wintry storms as snow and ice melt combine and pour into the sewer and utility systems. Lower Manhattan got 10 inches of snow in Wednesday's nor'easter

"Salt and snow melting and going into manholes, it decays the rubberized coatings on the electrical conduits and starts fires," said Joe Schiralli, an FDNY deputy chief. "It happens every winter."

The NYPD said the roadways around the block are closed to vehicles while responders assess the situation. Con Edison was at the scene late Thursday making repairs.

Chopper 4 footage from over the scene showed several fire and police vehicles in the streets near the site of the manhole explosion. 

Several people in the area took to Twitter to voice their concerns over the noise. 

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