Breaking down the blaze
About 40 firefighters poured approximately 625,000 gallons of water on the Royal Coach building as it burned in the early morning hours Wednesday.
That was just the first day.
All but a few walls of the three-story, 31,000-square-foot building burned to the ground within a few hours.
An excavator knocked down those walls while the rubble was still burning Wednesday evening.
The cleanup will likely take weeks, as the smoke and heat slowly dissipate.
Officials say the cause of the fire may never be determined.
“There's not a lot of stuff left of it to investigate,” Hastings City Fire Chief Roger Caris said Thursday. “It's not worth it.”
Bonnie Gettys, CEO/executive director of the Barry Community Foundation, which owns the building, said it seems unlikely their insurance company would conduct an investigation. Since the building is empty, it did not have property insurance and, instead, was covered under liability insurance.
Gettys said she does not yet know what the full extent of that coverage would be.
Assistant Chief of Hastings City Police Dale Boulter said the department is conducting an investigation.
“At this point, I have no idea what caused it,” Boulter said.
Officers are talking to people in the area, checking footage from nearby security cameras and looking for any relevant information, Boulter added.
“Typically when something of that magnitude takes place, people will tell us a lot of stuff that may not pertain to it,” he said.
Caris said gas and electricity had been cut off from the building.
“A building without any power and gas to it isn't going to take off on its own,” Thornapple Township Emergency Services Chief Randy Eaton said.
Boulter said arson has occurred in Hastings, but it is rare, and can be challenging to investigate and prosecute. Sometimes it's easy to prove, but sometimes it's impossible.
“Most of your evidence is burned up,” he said.
Sometimes, finding the source of a fire is as easy as finding burnt food in the oven, or a pile of wood with some teenagers acting oddly, Eaton said.
“You just kind of follow the road map you're provided,” Eaton said.
But, in this case, there's not much of a road map left.
Like any abandoned building, Boulter said there is a potential for break-ins or vagrancy. But he wasn't aware of any active or recent issues involving the Royal Coach property.
To Gettys, the most important fact about the fire is that no one was killed or injured, which she attributed to the hard work of the local firefighters.
“It could have been just a horrific fire,” Gettys said. “At the end of the day, it's bricks and mortar. No lives were lost. Nobody got hurt.”
She also was thankful the wind wasn't strong enough to cause the fire to spread.
“It wasn't terrible windy, which was good,” Eaton said. “Had it been a 20- to 25-mph wind, that would have been a different story.”
The amount of dew on the ground in the cold, early morning hours likely helped prevent the fire from spreading, Eaton said.
Even though the fire was massive, the job for the firefighters on the ground was relatively straightforward, he added. His department got the call sometime after 3:30 a.m. Eaton and three other members of the department jumped on a truck and headed into Hastings.
As they drove, the firefighters could listen to radio chatter from members of the Hastings department who were already on scene.
They could see the fire light up the night sky from at least eight miles away, Eaton said.
When Thornapple Township arrived at the scene they reported to Caris, who served as incident commander. He directed them where to start putting down water. The firefighters grabbed their tools, hooked up to a fire hydrant north of the building, laid down a large diameter hose and started spraying.
The initial call was prompted by an odor, possibly smoke, in the area, reports said.
By the time Caris had arrived at the scene, a third of the building was on fire. It had spread even further by the time the other departments arrived.
Since the building was already empty, the firefighters' priority was containment.
“You have more fire load there than you got water, so you're just containing it,” Eaton said.
“On that particular scene there isn't really a lot to do,” he added. “Basically, you go up and relieve the guy who's been sitting on that nozzle for a half an hour.”
It was too late to save Royal Coach, but damage to the nearby Hastings Manufacturing Company was prevented.
“Considering that it (Royal Coach) was fully involved when we got there, all you could do was protect any other exposures,” Eaton said. “I think everything went well, considering the size of the fire. There was no injuries, no other property was damaged.”
The firefighters chalked up part of that to their ability to work together as a team.
“Everybody pretty much knows what they're going to be doing,” Caris said. “They did their job.”
The different departments train in similar ways, so, when they're on scene together, they're all speaking the same language.
“Even though we don't work together like we work with our own team, they operate very much the same as we do,” Eaton said.
Thornapple Township was on the scene for about five hours, continuously putting water on the fire, until they left around 9 a.m.
Freeport Area Volunteer Fire Lt. Lani Forbes said some firefighters went from the fire to their day jobs.
Even after they leave a scene, the firefighters can't go straight home, they have to reset the trucks to go on the next run.
“There's a whole list of things to do to get that truck back in service,” Eaton said.
It took another hour and a half for the Thornapple Township crew to break down, repack, refuel and clean the truck.
As of Thursday, the future of the property is unclear.
Gettys said the Barry Community Foundation still wants to develop the property into housing, but she did not know how much those plans would be changed by the fire.
Applications to the Michigan State Housing Development Authority for low-income housing are graded on a point system. One of those point allocations is the history of the building. Gettys said she did not know how the project could be affected by having to build a new structure instead of using the old.
“Doing something from scratch and doing it new is certainly easier,” she said, “But the beauty of the architecture of that building, and how incredibly beautiful the anticipated project was, has been lost.”
If insurance does not cover the cost of cleaning up the rubble, the Barry Community Foundation will have to pay for it. Gettys said the foundation will look at ways of raising money for the project, and reaching out to community partners.
Barry County has a way of showing support, she said.
Gettys said she has already spoken to an excavation company that offered to do the work at-cost, if it isn't covered by insurance.
“I think that's the beauty of living in a community like ours,” she said.



