FDNY firefighter Christopher Zambrzycki was released from Harlem Hospital last week. The member of Engine 58 has been recovering since his dramatic fall down a shaft while on duty in Hamilton Heights. Zambrzycki was battling a six-alarm fire when he inadvertently backed into an open window, resulting in a life-threatening forty-foot fall. This incident occurred during efforts to extinguish a fire on West 145th Street, as reported by
ABC7NY
.
Upon his discharge, hospital staff, and his fellow FDNY comrades were present to bid him farewell. FDNY Commissioner Robert Tucker detailed the mishap, saying that Zambrzycki “stepped right into a window and then down about 40 feet of a shaft behind the building.” The firefighter’s survival and subsequent recovery have been nothing short of a testament to the risks inherent in the profession and a community’s capacity for support and solidarity.
Zambrzycki, who was tackling the blaze within the building and searching for trapped individuals, fell last Friday. The fire he was combatting had ripped through an apartment before intensifying and spreading to other floors. An investigation by FDNY fire marshals has since attributed the cause of the fire to an electrical malfunction involving a power cord to a lamp.
Among the dozens of fire personnel and emergency responders reacting to the November blaze, Zambrzycki’s ordeal and subsequent hospital release gathered significant attention, marking a high note in a potentially tragic event. “I want to thank the FDNY for being a true family”, Zambrzycki expressed his gratitude and mentioned the swift action of his colleagues in rescuing him, according to
New York Daily News
. In addition to Zambrzycki’s injuries, the fire caused minor injuries to five building residents and three other firefighters.
Local resident Bobby Dillard, a witness to the disaster described the volatility of the fire to New York Daily News, saying, “It started on the second floor. It blew out the windows. It died down but then it flared up again. It went from the third to the fourth floor. The firefighters looked back and it was burning like it had just started”. His account underscores the unpredictable and violent nature of urban fires, and the bravery of the firefighters who face them.
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