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'Worst possible scenario' for landmark Dallas eateries

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by WFAA

Posted on March 3, 2010 at 12:14 AM

Updated yesterday at 12:33 AM

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Greenville fire
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DALLAS — More than 100 Dallas firefighters fought a four-alarm fire that ate its way through four popular restaurants and bars on Lower Greenville Avenue in the early morning hours.

The blaze started at about 5:45 a.m. in the kitchen area at Terilli's Restaurant & Bar in the 2800 block of Greenville Avenue. Flames could be seen shooting out of the large building and smoke plumes could be seen for miles. Terilli's, The Hurricane Grill, Greenville Bar and Grill and Mick's Bar were all destroyed in the fire that spread through Terilli's attic area and burned its way through the popular bars and eateries.

"I looked through the backdoor and the windows and the roof was completely collapsed," said Gregg Merkow, who owns both the Greenville Bar and Grill and The Hurricane Grill. "The only thing still standing is the exterior walls ... You never want anything to happen, but this is the worst possible scenario that could occur."

"It's just a building but there are memories in that building," said Jessica Bates, a former employee.

"We went into panic mode. You could barely see across the street," said witness Ryan McCollum.

The section of Greenville Avenue in front of the building was closed as Dallas Fire-Rescue crews and the ATF dug through the rubble and investigated the cause of the fire. Investigators have ruled out arson but instead, are concentrating on electrical problems as the likely cause of the blaze.

Merkow did not have fire insurance for either business. He said he let it lapse because of its high cost. He had 30 employees who are all now without a job.

The destructive blaze also hit the businesses just days before the area's biggest money maker of the year, the annual St. Patrick's Day celebration. Business owners said they earn an entire year's worth of rent the day of the St. Patrick's Day Parade.

 

"All of these are historic restaurants on Lower Greenville. These are some of the best places in the neighborhood," said Angela Hunt from Dallas City Council.

Firefighters fought the blaze from tall ladders hovering above the now gutted building. One firefighter suffered heat exhaustion and smoke inhalation and was treated at a nearby hospital. He is in good condition.

The structure that housed the restaurants was built in the 1920s, said Patricia Carr, president of the Lower Greenville Neighborhood Association.

"This is as bad as the Arcadia going down," said Carr, referring to the 2006 fire that destroyed the historic Arcadia theater, a few blocks south on Greenville. The building did not have a sprinkler system and did not have true firewalls between each business. However, firefighters said they often do not see true firewalls.

"A true firewall will go all the way through the attic space and through the roof," said Battalion Chief Stuart Grant, Dallas Fire-Rescue. "And this building did not have those. What they had was party walls that separated the businesses. So, the attic space ran from end wall to end wall ... So, once that fire hit the attic space, it was free to travel all the way to the end."

In a fire report obtained by News 8, inspectors found 17 hazards, as recently as January, inside Tirelli's restaurant.

The violations included misplaced fire extinguishers and objects in front of an electrical panel. The restaurant was even ticketed for having outdoor gas heaters. But these are all are likely unrelated to the fire's cause.

The owner of Terilli's said the restaurant did pass a recent fire inspection on Friday.

Carr said the fire won't stand in the way of one of Lower Greenville's signature events.

"St. Patrick's Day is going to go ahead," she said.

Terilli’s, a Lower Greenville mainstay for more than 20 years, is across Goodwin Avenue from the Blue Goose restaurant and across Greenville from The Dubliner bar.

Greenville Bar and Grill's web site calls it the "oldest bar and grill in Dallas," saying it's been "in existence for 75 years." The restaurant-bar was renamed Merkow's Seafood and Steaks when Merkow purchased it in 2006. However, the site said nostalgia won out in 2007, and the new owner remodeled the restaurant and reopened it under its former name.

"My thinking now is we'll rebuild," Merkow said. "We'll be back, maybe better than ever."

He isn't alone. The owners of the other restaurants and bars said they too plan to rebuild. The owners said they also plan to have some type of presence at the upcoming St. Patrick's Day celebration.

Firefighters have been careful to try to save the historic facade, hoping it'll be one of the few things salvageable from this massive fire.

WFAA's Cynthia Vega, Jonathan Betz, Debbie Denmon and Marjorie Owens and The Dallas Morning News contributed to this report

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gomavs41 said on March 2, 2010 at 8:05 AM

This is truly a sad day for Dallas. My wife and I spent all of our special occasions at Terilli's and enjoyed everything about it. My heart goes out to the Terilli family. I pray that you will build it back up again - and just the way it was. Pete was a great man, by the way.

stoopid said on March 2, 2010 at 8:31 AM

Nothing on barkingdogs.org about it yet?

bro77dog said on March 2, 2010 at 8:34 AM

Hopefully, they can rebuild. Good luck!

mdavis2309 said on March 2, 2010 at 10:11 AM

I hope that they can rebuild!! If they do a fundraiser or donations I'm sure they'd be able to raise alot of money- especially to help out those employeed at those places! I'm willing to help in any possible way!!

phunkytreehugge said on March 2, 2010 at 10:53 AM

we have set up a page on facebook to help those affected by the fire this morning - we will be setting up a donation link and people can post job postings, etc along with sharing your favorite memories of these places. we are open to ideas of charity events or benefits to help. please join the page: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Help-Lower-Greenville/360095732494

seasalt said on March 2, 2010 at 12:56 PM

really sad! I was crossing my fingers it wasn't Society Bakery. What would I do w/out their pastry!

ssrhodes said on March 2, 2010 at 1:20 PM

I'm so, so sad to hear about this. I worked at Images by Aki (a hair salon) in the mid 1980s when it was still in that same building. My prayers and good vibes out to all who lost jobs.

khaney11 said on March 2, 2010 at 1:37 PM

I loved those bars and they have been around for a long time. They are part of lower greenville history and it is a sad day for greenville ave. It seems like all of the old buildings are getting destroyed, but the charm of greenville is all of those old buildings with so much history.

sos2010 said on March 2, 2010 at 5:13 PM

Should become a parking lot!

robbierob73 said on March 2, 2010 at 5:19 PM

I am sadden by this terrible loss. Terrilli's was the restaurant where my husband asked my father for my hand in marriage almost 12 years ago. It has since been a special place for us ever since. We look forward to return of such an important part of the Dallas restaurant scene.

christyspeaks said on March 2, 2010 at 5:22 PM

I'm amazed that a guy that owned two of the businesses had no fire insurance.

abarnett01 said on March 2, 2010 at 6:16 PM

This makes an excellent arguement for the removal of all old buildings in the cities. Instead you have people who want to save these buildings. Why? They aren't up to code, no sprinkler systems, no fire walls. You wouldn't be allowed to build a new building to this standard. So why do we allow the old buildings to remain in this condition. You are just asking for trouble. To me, when the buildings are that old, they should be torn down or renovated and brought up to current codes. The only good thing about the fire, you now have some viable parking spaces available for the lower Greenville area. Everyone should like that.

runningman said on March 2, 2010 at 7:46 PM

Boo hoo. Get over it. Its a flippin buidling. Joey was a jerk in high school anyway so whatev!

40mrpete said on March 2, 2010 at 8:23 PM

Gee whiz info...Moved to dallas in 1953..Was employed in the building where the resturant was , B&W Food store later became Wilson's food store. Worked there all through high school....A sad day! Lowell Peterson

scottfwtx said on March 2, 2010 at 8:27 PM

From the exposure on the news I thought the U.S. Capitol was on fire.

justjohn said on March 2, 2010 at 11:44 PM

@runningman Still holding grudges from HS, really? Shows how much you've grown up into society.

righttrack said on March 3, 2010 at 3:37 AM

What bank in their right mind will loan Merkow the money he needs to rebuild?? He has already demonstrated poor business savvy by letting his fire insurance lapse. If he had fire insurance, he wouldn't need to go to the bank for money to rebuild. He'd just wait on the check from the insurance company. The reason that the fire insurance premiums were so high is that there were so many code violations there.