HOUSTON: A large industrial explosion killed at least two people in the US city of Houston early on Friday (Jan 24), shattering windows and damaging homes as shocked residents emerged to survey the destruction.

Police chief Art Acevedo said two fatalities were confirmed after the pre-dawn blast at a manufacturing firm scattered debris half a mile (800 metres) away.



Firefighters, emergency services and police rushed to the scene when a loud blast was heard across much of the Texan city at about 4.15am.

Officials said the explosion had ripped through a grinding and manufacturing business 18 miles (29 kilometres) northwest of downtown Houston.

The property and surrounding premises were reduced to smoking, blackened wreckage, with rubble strewn around and many windows and doors blasted out.

A security camera video appeared to show a huge fireball erupting at the moment of the explosion.





"We do have confirmed fatalities in this case, at least two confirmed fatalities," Acevedo told reporters.

"The Houston Police Department has initiated a criminal investigation."

No evacuation order has been given at this time.@HoustonFire HazMat team is on scene and monitoring. — Houston Fire Dept (@HoustonFire) January 24, 2020



Many houses in the area were damaged, including shattered windows, collapsed roofs and broken garage doors.

'IT'S A WARZONE'

"(The explosion) knocked us all out of our bed, it was so strong," resident Mark Brady told the local KPRC TV news website.

"It busted out every window in our house. It busted everybody's garage door in around here ... and closer toward the explosion over here, it busted people's roofs in and walls in and we don't know what it is ... It's a warzone over here."

Building Explosion 4500 Gessner: HPD command post at Tanner @ Gessner. All traffic avoid hot zone between Gessner, Genard, Sefani & Clay Rd. #houtraffic #hounews CC8 — Houston Police (@houstonpolice) January 24, 2020

Brady said the explosion was extremely loud.

"This is a disaster," he said. "This is a big disaster. I really don't know what happened... Houston we could use your prayers."

Another resident named only as Kim said: "The whole house is ruined.

"The whole ceiling crashed down on all of us. We were all trapped in there and a nice family came and helped up out. It's trashed. It's just trashed.

"Every house was devastated."

Joey Charpentier, a resident of Centrepark Drive, Houston, posted a video that his camera, mounted on a window in his home, recorded of the blast.

The camera falls over after the explosion, which Charpentier said was due to the window breaking.

Mike Iscovitz, a meteorologist with the local Fox News channel, said the huge blast had shown up on local weather radar and was felt more than 32km away.

"Radar clearly shows this brief FLASH of reflectivity from NW Houston," he tweeted.

One resident told CNN affiliate KTRK that "the whole ceiling fell in" at her home.

"I thought maybe the house had gotten hit by lightning. And then I realized there was no storm," the resident said. "No one can figure out what happened."

After some hours, firefighters contained a blaze at the scene.

"They want us to shut everything down because we're going to have to remove glass," Jorge Esparza, a worker at a damaged Circle K store, told the Houston Chronicle.