FIRE IN THE ARCHIVE: Response and Recovery
Fireman tending to the controlled burn of library bookshelf fire. |
Last month I attended the Illinois Fire Service Institute
Burn Simulation and Recovery Workshop. Sponsored by the Consortium of Academic and
Research Libraries in Illinois (CARLI), the event aimed to teach archivists and
librarians how to cope with fires in cultural heritage institutions and
schools. The first half of the workshop was in-class presentations.
The two speakers
were: Eddie Bain, Investigator/Public Information Officer with the Savoy Fire
Department, and Jennifer Hain Teper, Head of Preservation Services at
University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana. Bain, with over 40 years of firefighting
experience, presented on fire prevention in today’s modern environment. Teper
introduced us to fire disaster planning, which focused on assessing the damage,
planning for recovery, and salvage operations.
Aftermath of five minute fire on library materials |
The second half of the workshop included hands-on
experience with fire and water damaged library and archival materials. Since we
were at the Illinois Fire Service Institute in Champaign, Illinois,
firefighters were on hand to set discarded library materials on fire! There
were two bookcases full of books, CDs, pamphlets, floppy discs, microfilm, film
reels, and VHS tapes; typical library and archive holdings.
I went into the
building and watched from a safe distance the fire work its way up the shelves,
and the smoke and heat fill the air. To get the fire going, the firefighters
used straw to increase the temperature to over 1400°. After five minutes the fire was extinguished
and everything was burnt and water logged.
Now came time for recovery, which was dirty and time
consuming. High temperature and high humidity equals a breeding ground for
mold, so in a real library or archive fire the main objective is to move
everything affected to a clean, and secure location. At the workshop, we moved the
objects to one of the firetruck bays so we could assess the damage. Some of the
books were un-salvageable, but a majority could be cleaned and rebound because
the fire only burned the spines.
The effects on the CDs, film reels, and other
plastic objects was really fascinating. Most of the cases melted and completely
encased the artifact within, but others only partially melted leaving the
object intact. The polyester film reels melted and fused together, making them
worthless. For salvage operations, we practiced washing books and wrapping them
for freeze drying, which is done to delay any preservation action until time
and money allows.
I walked away from this workshop with an abundance of disaster
planning knowledge, and some very cool pictures. I thank CARLI, the Preservation
Committee, and the Illinois Fire Service Institute for allowing us to
participate in this unique learning experience.
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