Huge fire battled by 100 firefighters at Jewson in Leeds is being treated as arson

A MAJOR fire at a Leeds builders' merchants is being treated as arson, the fire service has said.
Firefighters at the scene of the blaze, at Jewson in Moor Road, Leeds, on SundayFirefighters at the scene of the blaze, at Jewson in Moor Road, Leeds, on Sunday
Firefighters at the scene of the blaze, at Jewson in Moor Road, Leeds, on Sunday

The blaze tore through the Jewson builders’ yard in Moor Road, Hunslet, and destroyed the shop building as well as £1.4m in stock.

Read More
"I was screaming for everybody to get out" - Eyewitness accounts of huge blaze i...

Locals reported hearing explosions and smelling gas as the fire took hold in the early hours of Sunday and about 30 nearby homes had to be evacuated.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

It took 100 firefighters to bring the flames under control, with the fire also damaging a carriage at the nearby Middleton Railway visitor attraction.

One of those who had to leave their homes was 16-year-old Sophie Major, of Lake Terrace.

She said: "Whoever did it needs to be caught, 100 per cent, because they could have put all our lives in danger."

Neighbour Donna Atkinson, 42, added: "It is not just the business. It is people's homes. It is people's health."

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Jewson general manager Phil Robinson said that despite the devastation, they would be back at work today.

He said the business, its vehicles and its 15 staff would be relocating to another Jewson site, in nearby Gibraltar Island Road, where they would carry on as best they could.

Mr Robinson said the lost stock was not just in the yard - where piles of timber now lie in blackened heaps - but in the fully-stocked shop.

This included painting and decorating supplies, windows and plastic drainage ducting.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Mr Robinson said the fire was so big that aeroplanes on their way to and from Leeds Bradford Airport had to be diverted from the flight path which ran overhead.

"Witnesses are saying there were three separate fires," he said.

"The building is going to have to come down, by the looks of it.”

He said they would make the building safe when the firefighters had finished on the scene, "because we have got to protect the residents".

Related topics: