Volendam New Year's fire
The Volendam New Year's fire was a café fire in the Dutch town of Volendam during the 2000–2001 New Year's night. The fire began early on New Year's Day 2001 and caused the death of 14 young people. In all, 241 people were admitted to hospital, 200 of whom suffered serious burns.
Fire
The fire took place in a building that housed three bars. On New Year's Eve, the cafés were packed with more than 350 young people between 13 and 22 years of age when a short blaze happened in the café De Hemel which was located on the top floor after a sparkler hit Christmas decorations hung from the ceiling. The temperature in the room reached 400 °C.There was great panic and the heat, lack of oxygen and people falling over each other made escaping extremely difficult. There also were bars on the windows and too few emergency exits, all of which contributed to the high number of injuries. Survivors stated that shortly after the fire began all the lights went out contributing to the panic.
The first report reached the Amsterdam ambulance service CPA at 00:38 local time on 1 January. The first fire engine arrived at 00:46 CET. The Dutch Red Cross reported that the alarm was raised shortly after 00:30 local time and that it took 15 minutes for the first ambulances and medical teams to arrive. Mayor Frank IJsselmuiden claimed that the crowd had panicked because all but one of the emergency exits were blocked.
Victims
Initially only eight were reported dead after the fire and the majority of them were from Volendam and aged between 15 and 22. By January 18, four additional people had died in local hospitals raising the official death toll to 12.Many of those injured were hurt when they smashed windows and leapt from third and second floor windows in an attempt to escape the fire. Others including 53 injured individuals were admitted due to burns with some being flown to special burn units in Belgium and Germany.