Fire crews quickly converged on a brush fire that ignited Tuesday evening in the Hollywood Hills below several homes, according to L.A. fire officials.
The blaze ignited around 6:40 p.m. north of West Sunset Boulevard in the 2100 block of Sunset Plaza Drive, according to the Los Angeles Fire Department. It burned through around a quarter of an acre of vegetation as it moved uphill, briefly threatening nearby homes.
Within half an hour, fire officials reported that water drops from LAFD helicopters were “significantly slowing” fire progress below the homes. About 80 firefighting personnel were assigned to the fire, which burned one car but did not affect any structures.
By 7:30 p.m., all active flames were extinguished and forward progress had been stopped, according to the LAFD.
Those living nearby were instructed to shelter in place while helicopters continued water drops to cool hot spots between homes and hand crews worked to reach 100% containment in very steep terrain.
Amid January’s historic firestorm in Pacific Palisades and Altadena, the Sunset fire ignited in the Hollywood Hills near Runyon Canyon, prompting widespread evacuation orders and massive traffic jams as residents rushed to flee the area. That fire was reported at 2350 N. Solar Drive, burned around 60 acres and was contained within 24 hours, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.
The post Firefighters take quick action as Hollywood Hills brush fire threatens homes appeared first on Los Angeles Times.