Three people were killed and five people critically hurt by a fast-moving fire in an upper Manhattan apartment building early Monday, officials said.
The blaze broke out on the second floor of the six-story building on Dyckman St. near Broadway in Inwood about 12:30 a.m. and quickly grew to three alarms, FDNY officials said. Firefighters were on scene in three minutes.
“This fire was a very serious fire,” said FDNY Commissioner Lillian Bonsignore said. “It unfortunately resulted in many patients.”
The fire spread up the building’s lone staircase to eight apartments.

Theodore Parisienne / New York Daily News
Three people were killed and five critically hurt by a fire in an apartment building on Dyckman St. near Broadway in Inwood early Monday. (Theodore Parisienne / New York Daily News)
Medics treated 14 people, including a firefighter with minor injuries. Three residents died at the scene, while five more were hospitalized with critical injuries, FDNY officials said. Four more residents were taken to local hospitals with moderate or minor injuries.
The fire was brought under control at 3 a.m. Its cause has not yet been determined.
About 100 residents were displaced by the fire.
Lilian De Los Santos, 63, who has lived on the second floor for two years, said the fire forced her to go out the back of the building.
“One lady, when she went out, she broke a leg when she came down the fire escape,” De Los Santos said in Spanish. “I wanted to help the lady who broke the leg but I couldn’t help. I said, ‘’I’m sorry.’”

Theodore Parisienne / New York Daily News
Damage is seen inside an apartment afte a fatal fire on Dyckman St. near Broadway in Inwood early Monday. (Theodore Parisienne / New York Daily News)
Michael, 30, who lives on the fifth floor, could see smoke coming in under his apartment door.
“When I tried leaving the building on the main stairs, the fire was all in the hallway,” he said. “It was too hot. I opened the door but the fire tried to get in the apartment. I closed the door.”
He used the fire escape instead.
Fire officials said that, once again, open doors near a central staircase had allowed the flames to intensify and shoot upstairs to other apartments.
“We are still working with the fire department and with the Department of Buildings to determine what the cause of the fire was and also whether there was any negligence on the part of the landlord that contributed to the fire,” said Housing Preservation and Development Commissioner Diana Levy.
“It is under the housing maintenance code a requirement that all doors be self closing. And so if tenants are propping them open, we do need to do more to educate them on why not to do that. But we also need to make sure that landlords are complying with making sure all doors are self closing.”

Theodore Parisienne / New York Daily News
Investigators work at the scene of a fatal fire in an apartment building on Dyckman St. near Broadway in Inwood early Monday. (Theodore Parisienne / New York Daily News)
Mayor Mamdani said firefighters have enough obstacles to deal with without the added challenges of fire-feeding open doors and vehicles that block fire hydrants.
“There have been a number of times where I’ve responded to fires, I’ve arrived on the scene to meet the incredible first responders that our city has, and have been shown the fact that there was a car parked in front of a fire hydrant that then delayed the response to a five-alarm fire,” Mamdani said at an unrelated news conference in the Bronx.
With Josephine Stratman

Theodore Parisienne / New York Daily News
Fire damage is seen on the roof after a fatal fire in an apartment building on Dyckman St. near Broadway in Inwood early Monday. (Theodore Parisienne / New York Daily News)
