UCLA wades through damages from pipe flooding


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LOS ANGELES (AP) — The quiet summer campus of UCLA suddenly was steeped in water and chaos after a major water pipe burst and spewed some 8 million gallons (1 million cubic feet), stranding people in parking garages and flooding the school's storied basketball court less than two years after a major renovation.

The 30-inch (76 centimeters), nearly century old pipe burst Tuesday afternoon under nearby Sunset Boulevard, sending water 30 feet (9 meters) into the air, opening a 15-foot (4 meters) hole in the street and inundating part of the campus that soon was swarmed with police and firefighters.

"Unfortunately UCLA was the sink for this water source," UCLA Chancellor Gene Block said.

The break came amid a historic drought when California residents are being threatened with $500 fines for overuse.

"We lost a lot of water, around 35,000 gallons (4,678 cubic meters) a minute, which is not ideal in the worst drought in the city's history," City Councilman Paul Koretz said.

Repairing the pipe could take several days, city official Jeff Bray said at a Wednesday morning briefing. A number of valves were still leaking water into the ruptured pipe, and the complex repair operation cannot begin until it is drained, Bray said.

Despite the rupture, no utility customers were without water.

UCLA officials said six facilities were damaged. The flooding hit the part of campus that is home to its athletic facilities, with the greatest danger coming in a pair of parking structures that quickly began filling with water.

Firefighters, some using inflatable boats, saved at least five people who were stranded in the structures where more than 100 cars were stuck, city fire officials said. No injuries were reported.

Water cascaded to the entrance of Pauley Pavilion, considered one of college basketball's shrines since it was built in 1965, then poured on to the court named for legendary coach John Wooden and his wife Nell.

The arena — where basketball stars such as Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Bill Walton, Reggie Miller and Kevin Love have played — underwent a $132 million renovation that was completed in October 2012. At least 1 inch (2.5 centimeters) of water covered the floor Tuesday night, and its locker rooms also were flooded.

"It's painful. It's painful," Block said. "We just refurbished Pauley just a few years ago. And it's a beautiful structure. It's of course, a symbolic structure for this entire campus."

Athletic Director Dan Guerrero said the floor would be cleared of water overnight and the damage assessed Wednesday.

The school may need to make contingency plans, but "luckily we're not in the middle of basketball season," Administrative Vice Chancellor Jack Powazek said.

The other two campus buildings damaged were the Wooden Center, which has training facilities for students, and the J.D. Morgan Center, which houses the school's sports trophies, hall of fame and athletics offices.

Many students took the flooding in stride, walking calmly across campus with their backpacks in ankle-deep water.

Paul Phootrakul of the UCLA Alumni Association, who was in business attire for an evening event, took off his dress shoes and dress socks, and rolled up his slacks in an attempt to wade to his car, which was on the bottom floor of one of the flooded structures. Firefighters stopped him, saying the structure was unsteady because of the weight of all the water.

The 93-year-old high-pressure line of riveted steel pipe spewed a geyser of water for about 3 ½ hours before it could safely be shut down without causing more damage, said Jim McDaniel from the city.

Crews struggled to get to the area at rush hour, and they had to research which valves to shut off without affecting service, McDaniel said. Some water service was briefly interrupted but quickly restored.

There was no immediate word on the cause.

McDaniel said there was no "magic technology" to determine when a new line is needed, and the city is on a replacement cycle of over 300 years for main lines.

"Every city that has aging infrastructure has issues like this, and we're no exception."

___

Associated Press writers Christopher Weber, Bob Jablon, Beth Harris and Andrew Dalton contributed to this story.

Copyright © The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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