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Fort Lee Funds Dedicated To Families Displaced In Devastating Apartment Building Fire

UPDATE: A fund established to aid Hurricane Sandy victims will go toward helping families displaced by a fire that destroyed an apartment building near the George Washington Bridge.

Aftermath

Aftermath

Photo Credit: Peter Arvanitis
2365 Hudson Terrace, Fort Lee

2365 Hudson Terrace, Fort Lee

Photo Credit: Damien Danis for DAILY VOICE
No serious injuries were reported.

No serious injuries were reported.

Photo Credit: Damien Danis for DAILY VOICE
2365 Hudson Terrace

2365 Hudson Terrace

Photo Credit: Damien Danis for DAILY VOICE
The blaze raged for hours.

The blaze raged for hours.

Photo Credit: Damien Danis for DAILY VOICE
2365 Hudson Terrace, Fort Lee.

2365 Hudson Terrace, Fort Lee.

Photo Credit: Jo Fehl for DAILY VOICE

Two volunteer firefighters were hospitalized with relatively minor injuries in the six-alarm fire on Hudson Terrace in Fort Lee, which ignited Saturday afternoon, continued through the night and collapsed portions of the five-story brick building.

Authorities initially feared the worst when a resident was unaccounted for, Mayor Mark Sokolich said, but that tenant apparently is out of the country.

The Red Cross had put up about a dozen families at local hotels and assisted others from the 36 units, said the mayor, who was at the scene.

Sokolich also announced the dedication of Hurricane Sandy funds to help the displaced families. You can donate to the fund by calling the mayor's office: (201) 592-3500, ext. 1003.

Investigators were trying to determine the official cause, although they believe it was accidental.

Township and Palisades Interstate Parkway police were beaten back by flames and smoke as they tried to get into the second-floor apartment where the fire broke out across from the parkway entrance/exit around 3:30 p.m.

Flames shot out the window and quickly spread to the lower and upper floors of the five-story brick building.

Thick smoke blew east across the PIP toward the Hudson River, jamming area traffic on the plus-90-degree day.

The fire was still raging several hours later as portions of the building continued to collapse.

It was declared under control at 1:25 a.m., although pockets and rekindles kept firefighters working until daylight.

Cliffside Park, Edgewater, Emerson, Englewood, Leonia, Palisades Park, Paramus and Teaneck firefighters were among the mutual aid responders either at the scene or in coverage.

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