Newtown house fire: Police believe deadly fire deliberately lit after finding accelerant

Police are treating a deadly house fire in Sydney’s inner-west as deliberately lit after eccelerant was found at the scene.

Three people have died and police hold serious concerns for a fourth after a fire engulfed a boarding house in the suburb of Newtown in the early hours of Tuesday morning.

Emergency services rushed to the boarding house at the intersection of Probert and Albermarle Streets about 1am Thursday after neighbours woke to the sounds of explosions and found the two-story house alight.

NSW Police confirmed the bodies of three people had been found, with one person still unaccounted for.

The three people are yet to be formally identified.

NEWTOWN FIRE
Three people have died and three rushed to hospital after a fire at a double-story boarding house in Newtown this morning. NCA NewsWire / James Gourley Credit: News Corp Australia

An 80-year-old man who was taken to Royal North Shore Hospital is in a critical condition.

NSW Ambulance paramedic Braden Robinson said there were “serious concerns for the welfare of residents” when they arrived.

“We treated a number of patients for various injuries including burns and smoke inhalation, three of which required hospitalisation,” he said.

Eight residents were able to exit the building with three people taken to hospital, Acting Superintendent Van Akker told media at 7.30am.

“The building is pretty unstable and we are concerned of a collapse,” he said.

“Being a boarding house, we are not too sure who lived there and who was home,” Fire and Rescue NSW Superintendent Adam Dewberry told 2GB on Tuesday morning.

More than 30 firefighters responded to reports of a fire in Newtown around 1am Tuesday.

They arrived on the scene to find a “very intense flames” coming out of the first and second levels of a boarding house on the corner of Probert St and Albemarle St.

Witnesses described seeing one resident jump out of a second-storey window to escape the flames.

Firefighters worked quickly to contain the flames that were already touching adjoining properties.

A number of residents lined the streets having made the decision to evacuate their homes in the early hours of the morning.

NEWTOWN FIRE
A man had to jump from a two-storey window to escape the blaze. NCA NewsWire / James Gourley Credit: xjmtzywNews Corp Australia

Witnesses reported hearing a “loud bang” during the blaze though it is unknown yet what caused the explosion.

Police are making inquiries to account for all residents that were supposed to be home at the time of the fire.

The flames were quickly extinguished by firefighters but due to the extreme heat of the blaze, emergency services are waiting on standby in case fire reignites.

NSW Police have established a crime scene and are investigating the circumstances that led to the fire.