Virginia

Dog found alive in rubble nearly a week after Virginia home exploded

Two couples and their young children who lived in the home on Coby Hunt Court in Haymarket lost everything.

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Six days after a powerful explosion leveled a home in Haymarket, Virginia, a dog was found alive in the rubble, fire officials say.

Two couples and their young children who lived in the home on Coby Hunt Court managed to escape the house unharmed before the explosion reduced their home to an unrecognizable pile of debris the morning of Tuesday, Oct. 15. They thought their three pets likely died in the blast, which shook the neighborhood.

“Nothing’s going to bring them back unless somehow they made it out alive, which I hope they did, but who knows where they are,” said Jarrett Struniak, who lived in the home with his fiancee and 3-year-old daughter.

On Monday morning, firefighters found one of the animals — a brindle pitbull named Brandy — alive.

Prince William County Fire and Rescue said they went back to the home after someone called Monday and said they could hear a dog barking from underneath the rubble. Crews freed the dog and fire officials said she would be reunited with her family.

"She appeared to be in good shape and showed her happiness of being freed by rapid tail wagging," Assistant Chief Matt Smolsky said in a statement.

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"After an incredible story of survival, the dog is expected to make a full recovery from [the] incident," the fire department said.

Contractor ruptured gas line before explosion

Fire investigators said on Wednesday a private contractor who was working on replacing the water line to the home hit and ruptured a gas line.

Firefighters came shortly after 4 p.m. and evacuated the home, along with the neighboring houses. Washington Gas arrived to the home about an hour later to make repairs, but the home exploded a short time after, fire officials said.

“I mean, honestly, you can see everything go away in an instant and you realize you have nothing,” Struniak said. “It’s frustrating and demoralizing.”

Struniak said he was relieved his loved ones were OK. 

“You can't really do anything about it. You can be angry, but what’s that going to do? You’re being angry at the wind,” he said. “The silver lining is that nobody was hurt. Not a firefighter, not a city worker, not a single person in the cul de sac was hurt, and that’s really great in itself.”

Crews spent much of the day Wednesday sifting through the wreckage.

The blast rattled neighbors, some of whom were standing outside at the time.

"I'm standing there and my back's to it. It's just this boom!," neighbor Rob Karas said. "Last night my whole back hurt and I was in pain. And it blew out my garage and then there was some debris."

"I just heard a loud boom and I screamed because I got really scared," neighbor Mouna Karas said.

Struniak said the work at the home was supposed to be a routine repair. When workers hit the gas line, he said he had no idea there would be an explosion. 

“You could smell gas and they were addressing it, you know, nothing, it wasn't shut down,” Angie Rick, another neighbor, said Tuesday.

Investigators are still working to learn what ignited the explosion.

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