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3 firefighters injured, over 60 residents displaced after apartment blaze near National Harbor, Md.

Thick smoke from a fire near Oxon Hill was visible near Woodley Park in Northwest D.C. — ten miles away. (º£½ÇÉçÇøapp/Alejandro Alvarez)
The aftermath on Sunday morning of a raging fire in Glassmanor. All three floors of the residential building were heavily damaged, fire officials said, leaving 61 people displaced from over a dozen apartments. (º£½ÇÉçÇøapp/John Domen)

Three firefighters sustained injuries and over 60 people were forced to leave their homes following a two-alarm apartment fire in Glassmanor, Maryland on Saturday afternoon.

Around 6:30 p.m., Prince George’s County firefighters responded to a towering fire at a three-story, garden-style apartment building in the 5500 block of Livingston Terrace, near National Harbor.

Residents as flames engulfed all three floors, gutting much of the building’s interior and sending a smoke plume into the sky that remained visible for hours across much of the area.

º£½ÇÉçÇøapp received listener reports of thick, distant smoke from as far away as Northwest D.C. — ten miles from the scene of the inferno.

The fire was fully contained around 8:30 p.m., but rescue crews remained to check for additional hot spots, Prince George’s County fire department spokesman Mike Yourishin said, adding all three floors saw heavy damage and the building suffered a partial roof collapse.

Three firefighters sustained minor burns and were transported to a local hospital for treatment. There were no confirmed reports of injured residents.

61 residents — 39 adults and 22 juveniles — have been displaced and are receiving assistance from both county officials and the capital region Red Cross.

Displaced residents will receive lodging, financial assistance, a small cash grant and toiletry kit, Paul Carden, Red Cross’ regional disaster program officer, told º£½ÇÉçÇøapp.

D.C., Alexandria and Fairfax Country firefighters supported their Maryland colleagues. D.C. engines for Prince George’s County first responders as they devoted resources to battling the blaze.

º£½ÇÉçÇøapp’s John Domen and Alejandro Alvarez contributed to this report.

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