Fire at First Baptist Church in Texarkana, Texas


Categories: Decontamination, Emergency Response, Fire & Soot, Emergency Response Preparedness
 

Church Web
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AREPA’s workstations set up to adhere to social distancing guidelines
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AREPA specialists engineering a dedicated hydroxyl chamber for decontaminated equipment
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A circuit board before decontamination
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A circuit board after decontamination
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A circuit board before decontamination
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A circuit board after decontamination
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A dry transformer before decontamination
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A dry transformer after decontamination
Incident

The morning of March 8th was a typical Sunday morning as worshipers gathered at the First Baptist Church in Texarkana, Texas. Just hours later, the church faced an unforeseen fate. Shortly after 3 p.m., a fire started in a control room sound booth on the second floor, spreading to the main broadcast area as well as three offices. Smoke and soot spread throughout the church’s ventilation system, affecting nearly every area in the facility including electronic equipment.

The church, which has approximately 3,000 congregants and streams services worldwide to over 182 countries, lost access to their audio/video production equipment, abruptly halting their ability to broadcast services.

Servpro, a facility restoration company, was hired to dry, clean and mitigate further building damage. Servpro immediately engaged AREPA to decontaminate sound equipment, allowing the church to resume services from a new temporary location the following Sunday.

Challenges & Logistics

The second floor broadcast area and three adjacent offices were rendered unsalvageable. The classrooms and sanctuary were heavily contaminated with smoke and soot, and the remaining offices and atrium areas on the first floor, which were intuitively thought to have been safe from exposure, were lightly contaminated due to the ventilation ductwork air circulation.

The main sanctuary required a complete demolition. The work offices required a controlled demolition, meaning that explosive materials were placed in a pre-determined and timed sequence, to ensure strategic collapse of those designated areas.

Following the initial emergency activities, which took AREPA six days to complete, AREPA was asked to concentrate on equipment that would ultimately be stored off-site, until the church reconstruction was complete.

A comprehensive inventory was generated to account for all the equipment on site. Due to ongoing demolition work and the sizeable number of contractors engaged in the recovery, safely negotiating around recovery personnel and relocating the equipment to the off-site staging area, proved to be challenging.

The fire occurred during the first few weeks of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, when most states imposed “shelter-in-place” restrictions. Normal travel arrangements became anything but normal. Stringent safety guidelines were implemented. Daily temperature readings, respirators, adequate workspace between specialists and continuous sterilization were implemented.

Outcome

By engaging AREPA early on an emergency work order, the church was able to host services the following Sunday from its temporary location.

AREPA inventoried 600 items that consisted of audio/video equipment, stage lighting, office equipment, and musical instruments among others. Of the 600 items, 550 were decontaminated in approximately one month. The rest of the items were deemed unsalvageable and required replacement. AREPA’s decontamination efforts saved the church approximately $500K as compared to wholesale replacement.

Rebuilding the church is estimated to take one year from the date of loss.

 

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