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Update: Wiggins Street fire displaces residents of three condos

PHOTOS BY LEA KAHN/STAFF
Three condominiums at 37 Wiggins St. sustained heavy fire damage when a fire broke out around 3 p.m. Jan. 10. The remainder of the building suffered smoke and water damage, and was declared uninhabitable. The Princeton Fire Department was assisted by fire companies from surrounding towns. The cause of the fire is under investigation.

Three households have been left homeless by a fire that started in the third-floor condominium at 37 Wiggins St. around 3 p.m. Jan. 10.

The fire, which went to a second alarm, cause heavy fire damage to the third-floor condominium, as well as smoke and water damage. The condominiums on the first and second floors also suffered smoke and water damage.

Two residents in the third-floor condominium, the residents of the second-floor condominium and the lone resident of the first-floor condominium have been displaced because of the fire, said Michael Yeh, Princeton’s director of Emergency Services.

A red sticker declaring the building to be uninhabitable was placed at the entrance to the house by the Princeton Building and Construction Department.

Jeff Wiltsey, who reported the fire, was working around the corner on Madison Street when he smelled smoke.

“I thought it was a wood stove or a fireplace. I saw a big cloud of black smoke. I walked toward it. The smoke was coming from the siding and the roof of the house,” Wiltsey said.

Wiltsey said he called 911 to report the fire. Police officers quickly arrived on the scene, and then the Princeton Fire Department arrived, he said.

Yeh, the town’s director of Emergency Services, said he could see heavy smoke and fire coming from the rear attic area. He said he was responding from two blocks away from the fire.

Yeh praised the firefighters, who did an “excellent job of confining the advanced fire conditions” to the attic area.

The fire reached two-alarm status because of the need for more firefighters.

The Princeton Fire Department, which was the first fire department on the scene, was assisted by firefighters from the Plainsboro Fire Company, the Princeton Plasma Physics Lab Fire Department and the Princeton Junction Volunteer Fire Company.

The Kingston Volunteer Fire Company, the Rocky Hill Fire Department, the Kendall Park Volunteer Fire Company, Montgomery Township Volunteer Fire Company No. 2 and the Hamilton Township Fire Department also responded.

There were no injuries, Yeh said.

The fire remains under investigation by Princeton Fire Marshal Joseph Novak.

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