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WPCNR CITY HALL CIRCUIT. By John F. Bailey. July 8, 2010:
When the Bengal Tiger Restaurant caught fire Wednesday afternoon, at an undetermined time, there was no sprinkler system in the restaurant to slow the spread of the blaze, White Plains Fire Chief, Richard Lyman told a press conference at city hall this afternoon.

When firefighters arrived at the Bengal Tiger, they were responding to a report of smoke coming from the Tiger area. Lyman answering a question from White Plains Week’s Peter Katz, said police officers quickly cleared the buildings on the

Aftermath News Conference, City Hall: Damon Amadio, Building Commissioner, Police Chief James Bradley, Mayor Adam Bradley, Fire Chief Richard Lyman.
Lyman said firemen attempted get water on the blaze in the interior of the restaurant, but were called them back outside because of the rapid spread of the fire, and the lack of ventilation. In the rapidly deteriorating conditions, Lyman said, the strategy was to bring the firefighters out and conduct a containment strategy to prevent the spread to other buildings on the block and the two story office building on Court Street. Lyman said fire went up the columns from the basement and got into the cockloft(roof of the building)that was wood construction.
It is not known who phoned in the alarm which was received by the fire bureau at 2:29 P.M., Lyman said.
Lyman said the Latin American Café restaurant next door, did have a sprinkler system installed, but he did not indicate that it had activated. Lyman also said he had learned that there were explosions in the building according to what persons on the scene had told him.(Two other uniformed personnel have told WPCNR they had heard explosions, and a third had confirmed that he had been told there were explosions.)
Mayor Adam Bradley said he had been told by persons from the restaurant the fire had started in the basement of the Bengal Tiger and that the search for what started the devastating destruction was now under way.
A matter that will be determined as part of the investigation will be– how long the fire was going before it was phoned in,or in the case at this time, when smoke was reported; what activities were going on at the time in the Bengal Tiger that might have lead to the fire starting.
Chief Lyman said that Bengal Tiger did not have a sprinkler system because it was not required to conform to the
WPCNR asked Mayor Adam Bradley if he was going to direct the city to look into how many restaurants in buildings similar to the block that was gutted yesterday existed without sprinkling systems, and whether code could be legislated to equip non-fire retardant equipped establishments and buildings with sprinblers.
Bradley said they would look into it but that it was a legal issue as to whether non-conforming properties could be forced to upgrade. Asked if the city would supply a list of restaurants and buildings in the downtown that were non-conforming, Bradley said WPCNR would have to file a Freedom of Information Act request. Amadio, the Commissioner of Building, told WPCNR “there were a great number of (non-conforming) buildings.”
Adam Bradley said the 11-hour fire fight was “a devastating fire to the citizens.” The Mayor said 13 stores were affected by the fire, and 7 were destroyed from The Bengal Tiger to the beauty salon around the corner on Court Street. He praised the White Plains Fire Bureau who “performed amazingly in adverse conditions,” and they were fortunate there were no serious injuries. He said 24
“It was a fabulous joint effort,” the Mayor said.
He thanked
Chief Lyman said 60 firefighters in total worked on the sweeping blaze which alternate blackened the city streets with thick dark smoke and white foggy acrid smoke for 10 hours, including 9 companies.
Bradley said the transformer explosion that took place about 7:30 P.M. resulting in the closing of
Chief Lyman said that a fire at the Con Edison substation on

















