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A water main burst on Sunset Blvd and has closed traffic in both directions. The water has begun flooding the UCLA campus.
Courtesy:
KTLA

LOS ANGELES (KTLA)—

An approximately 93-year-old underground water main broke in Westwood Tuesday afternoon, sending water flooding into streets and onto the UCLA campus, stranding people and vehicles and prompting the closure of Sunset Boulevard.

Three people were rescued from parking structures, the department’s Brian Humphrey told KTLA. Parking structures 4 and 7 were closed and people should not try to retrieve their cars, UCLA announced.The Los Angeles Fire Department was called to the incident shortly before 3:30 p.m., finding a towering geyser of water rising from Sunset Boulevard.

Five buildings on campus were severely impacted, including the basketball facility, Pauley Pavilion, and John Wooden Center. Drake Stadium was also flooded, video from the scene showed.

“It’s like I’m at Niagara Falls on Sunset,” said one area resident who spoke to KTLA.A geyser of water was shooting several dozen feet into the air from a hole in a roadway near the Spieker Aquatic Center, video from Sky5 showed. A main had broken in the center of Sunset Boulevard, LAFD Capt. Jaime Moore said.

The address given for the flooding was 10630 W. Sunset Blvd., next to the UCLA campus (map).

Busy Sunset Boulevard was shut down between Hilgard and Veteran avenues, and the roadway was likely to remain closed for a while during dewatering, water main and road surface repairs, officials said.

Pauley Pavilion was flooded by a water main break that spewed water across much of the UCLA campus on July 29, 2014. (Credit: KTLA)
The legendary Pauley Pavilion flooded during the water main break. The pavilion was recently renovated in 2012. Courtesy: KTLA

“I’ve never seen a water main break this large,” Moore said. “I’ve never seen one with this much water, this much pressure and that much damage to a major street like this.”

Utility crews were shutting down multiple valves to avoid rupturing lines, the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power stated on Twitter about 5:10 p.m. It would take some time to stop the flow, the DWP said.

The 30-inch pipeline handles 75,000 gallons per minute, DWP said.

L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti tweeted that the broken pipe been installed in 1921, correcting an earlier tweet that said the pipe was from 1912.

“We’re treating this the same as we would a flash flood,” Moore said. “Everybody is safe as long as they stay away from this water.”While authorities were urging people to avoid the area and stay out of the water, the Fire Department was responding with four swift-water boats that could be deployed.

Moore urged people to stay away from the water because of slippery conditions, fast-running water, and debris.

Nonetheless, aerial video showed dozens of people walking through giant brown pools of water across the campus.

Water was seen inside the J.D. Morgan Center, which houses athletic staff and administration offices, the George Kneller Academic Center, UCLA’s Athletic Hall of Fame, and the John Wooden Center, according to the university.“People are standing in the water almost out of a sense of amusement,” Humphrey told KTLA. “It doesn’t take much more than an ankle depth of water to sweep somebody into harm’s way, so we’re hoping to get UCLA campus officials to move people here away … from this very dramatic cascade of water.”

Traffic was jammed in the area, the Los Angeles Police Department stated in an advisory.

The flooding came amid statewide calls to conserve water during a historic and extreme drought.

The state water board recently passed emergency regulations allowing local agencies to issue citations — with fines of up to $500 — for failing to comply with water use restrictions, including waste of water on hard surfaces.

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💦 UCLA is flooded. 💦 #ucla

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For updates on this story from KTLA.com, click here.