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Former Piano Factory Collapses

Two firefighters are dead and two more injured in a building collapse.

Firefighters work the scene of a fire that started Wednesday in York, Pa., Thursday, March 22, 2018. York officials said part of the four-story building fell on firefighters as they were looking for hot spots and investigating the cause of the fire that broke out Wednesday at the Weaver Organ and Piano factory.
Firefighters work the scene of a fire that started Wednesday in York, Pa., Thursday, March 22, 2018. York officials said part of the four-story building fell on firefighters as they were looking for hot spots and investigating the cause of the fire that broke out Wednesday at the Weaver Organ and Piano factory.
John A. Pavoncello/York Dispatch via AP

YORK, Pa. (AP) — A section of a burned-out former piano factory in Pennsylvania collapsed Thursday a day after a fire, killing two firefighters and injuring two others who were looking for hot spots and investigating the cause of the blaze.

Firefighters Ivan Flanscha and Zachary Anthony died at a local hospital, York Mayor Michael Helfrich said in a statement Thursday, calling it a "tragic day in York's history."

The two other firefighters injured in the Thursday collapse, Assistant Chief Greg Altland and firefighter Erik Swanson, were in stable condition and being treated for injuries that are not life-threatening, the mayor said.

The four firefighters were looking for hot spots and the cause of a fire that broke out Wednesday when a large section of the former Weaver Organ and Piano factory building's wall collapsed on them, York officials said.

The former factory was being converted into residential units, and was expected to be completed by this summer in the city about 100 miles (about 160 kilometers) west of Philadelphia.

The collapse trapped all four of the firefighters, who were rushed to an area hospital after being rescued.

"This is the worst day in my career, this is the worst day for the York City Fire Department," said York Fire Chief David Michaels. "These were the guys you wanted in the fire truck."

"We are totally overwhelmed," Michaels said, adding that the department was going to need to lean on a lot of people in the aftermath of the deaths of the two firefighters.

Flanscha was named the York City Firefighter of the Year in 2004, and was a 20-year veteran of the department. Anthony had been with the department since 2010.

The two firefighters are the 12th and 13th city firefighters killed in the line of duty in the department's history.

People are organizing to assist the families of the firefighters, Helfrich said. A number of families displaced by the collapse are being assisted by a nearby church.

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