Multiple Los Angeles Fire Department units rushed to a structure fire in Venice on Tuesday after an alert flagged a blaze at 565 E Washington Blvd. Fire Station 63 crews were listed among the responding companies, and the department’s post included a map and a link for live incident details. Early information about injuries, damage and the cause of the blaze remained limited as crews worked the scene.
According to the Los Angeles Fire Department, the alert posted on X named FS63 and pointed users to a map and an incident-details page for status updates. That social notice serves as the primary official record of the call while firefighters remain on scene and department crews operate.
Station 63 leads the local response
Public station listings from LAFD show Station 63 at 1930 Shell Avenue in Venice, part of the department’s West Bureau and the neighborhood’s nearest engine company. That proximity helps explain why FS63 was among the units named on the department’s alert, which lists companies by assignment and location.
What neighbors should expect
At this early stage the department’s alert did not include casualty or damage details. Investigators or on-scene incident command may post updates to the linked details page as the situation is assessed, according to LAFD. The call arrives during a busy spring for LAFD, as roughly 90 structure fires by mid-April had already kept crews hopping, a reminder to keep smoke alarms in working order and follow official instructions during emergency responses…