FDNY Engine 229/Ladder 146

FDNY Engine 229/Ladder 146 A Little History Lesson.....

Engine Company 229 was first organized as Engine 29 of the Brooklyn Fire Department on November 1, 1890.
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Their firehouse was located at 246 Frost Street, in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn. The now privately owned building still stands there to this day and can be rented out. When Brooklyn became part of the City of New York in 1898, the Brooklyn Fire Department merged into the FDNY. Engine 29 was then reorganized as Engine 229 on January 1, 1913 and moved over to their current home on Richardso

n Street. The opening of the Williamsburg bridge in 1903 brought a large boom in population to the area and it soon became the most densely populated neighborhood in New York City. It was clear a new ladder company would be needed to keep fire protection in the area. So, on January 1, 1916, Ladder Company 146 was organized and moved into the quarters of Engine 229 on Richardson St. (Where they still both live together happily to this day.) Ladder 146 was originally a tiller truck (like most ladder companies in the city) and eventually became a tower ladder in 1972. In March of 2011 they received the newest model of tower ladders with a walk-through cab. The aftermath of September 11th shined light on a need for enhanced units in the field that could act in the absence of rescue or squad units for technical rescue or haz-mat incidents. So in 2002, L146 was designated a SOC Support company and E229 a decon engine. Members received additional training and can now start setting up an operation that normally would require a squad or rescue. Only a few of these such companies exist in each borough.

Address

75 Richardson St
Brooklyn, NY
11211

This is NOT an official FDNY page and the content or opinions herein are that of the people posting and do not necessarily reflect those of the FDNY or any related agencies.

General information

FDNY Engine 229 and Ladder 146 protect life and property in the ever-growing Greenpoint and Williamsburg area of Brooklyn. What was once a predominantly Puerto Rican, Dominican, Italian and Polish crime-ridden area filled with rowframe housing is now a large and diversely gentrified area. Old or shoddy construction and cramped apartments are the norm on some streets, while others have million dollar high-rises, condos and lofts. The members are well prepared to meet the challenge and protect life and property no matter what we are called for.

Telephone

911

Website

www.ufalocal94.org www.meritmattersusa.blogspot.com

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