Fireworks went off as the celebration started shortly after midnight while the fire continued to burn.

Burning debris rained down from the building as firetrucks raced to the scene. The building was evacuated, and Dubai's media office said 14 people suffered minor injuries.

It was not immediately clear what caused the fire, which ran up at least 20 stories of the building. The blaze broke out at the five-star Address Downtown, a 63-story hotel and residential building.

Fire engulfed a luxury building Thursday near where tens of thousands of people gathered for Dubai's massive New Year's Eve fireworks display.

People run away after the burning The Address Hotel in downtown Dubai in the United Arab Emirates on Dec. 31, 2015.

Dubai officials said reports suggest the blaze started outside the 20th floor of the building, but they maintain the fire has not spread inside the structure. Four squads of firefighters responded and were working to stop the fire's spread.



About 15 minutes before midnight local time, large explosions could be heard from inside the burning building. It was not clear what caused the blasts.



Officials said the fire was 90 percent contained. But shortly before midnight, flames still laced the side of the building as smoke billowed around it.

The building sits near the Burj Khalifa, the world's tallest skyscraper at 828 meters (2,716 feet).

Dubai tweet

U.S. officials do not yet know what caused the blaze, though they have been cautious about potential threats to celebrations, a senior counterterrorism official told NBC News.

The fire broke out about two hours before midnight local time, when the fireworks display was set to begin. The display ended up starting shortly after midnight.

Tens of thousands of people whistled and cheered at the show taking place at the Burj Khalifa. Organizers had installed 400,000 LED lights on the Burj Khalifa and used some 1.6 tons of fireworks for the seven-minute extravaganza.

From there, the fireworks were to light up the sky around the sail-shaped Burj Al Arab and later down near the Dubai Marina. Fireworks also will be on display in Abu Dhabi, the capital of the country of seven emirates.

Nearly an hour after the fire began, some onlookers began to leave while others stood, pressed against crowd barricades, watching the blaze. Among them was Chris Browne, a tourist from London, who watched the blaze with her husband, Stephen, standing behind her. They said they hoped no one was injured.

"It's pretty scary stuff," she said.

Standing nearby, Stuart O'Donnell, a British intensive care nurse who works in Dubai, said he was worried for those inside the building.

"You feel sad for the people inside. ... It spread so quickly when it started," he said.

He and others in the crowd wondered what had started the blaze. "I do feel suspicious of when a fire breaks out on New Year's Eve," he said.