ARCCA was contacted to investigate an explosion that occurred at home heated with propane.  Based on preliminary information, the home had an external propane tank mounted several hundred feet from the home.

Steps Taken:

  • ARCCA’s expert attended a joint party inspection at the site of the fire within weeks of the incident.
  • The expert collected gas sample following industry standards for testing.
  • The expert and joint party experts tested the gas regulator.
  • The expert and joint party experts tested the gas service lines with pressurized air for leaks.
  • The experts visually examined the gas system lines installed by the homeowner.
  • The expert sent the gas sample for odorant testing.
RESIDENTIAL EXPLOSION PIC 2

Manmade Pond Behind House


Final Findings:

Upon arrival at the home, the front side of the house appeared normal and undisturbed.  Upon walking to the back side of the house, the rear half of the home and an addition had been blown off the foundation, and pieces of the home and debris were pushed out in large complete pieces out into the yard and into a manmade pond.

The homeowner was a person that worked in gas system installation and had installed a new section of flexible piping himself.  The gas sample came back positive for sufficient odorant as required by federal regulations.  Furthermore, all of the experts could smell the gas inadvertently released during gas system testing.  The homeowner having been working in the gas industry had become habituated to the smell of the odorant and could not tell that there was a system gas leak, as was discovered during testing.

The home had experienced a low level explosion as categorized in NFPA 921.  Propane is a heavier than air gas.  Propane leaks resulted in propane pooling in the basement and crawl spaces underneath the home and home addition.  Eventually the propane reached the level of a standing pilot light for an indoor gas fire place.

The cause of the explosion was a propane leak in the installed gas supply system.  The origin was at or about an indoor gas fire place.  A human factors causation was the homeowner’s habituation to gas odorant.

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