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1675-1 Lombardy Inn Hotel, 3611 Collins Ave. , Tuesday night. Investigators are calling that fire accidental. KEYWORDS: MB FIRE MD TAG: 8603020876 37 of 60, 2 Terms mh FIRE-GUTTED HOTEL NOW AMONG SAFEST 06/20/1985 THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1985, The Miami Herald DATE: Thursday, June 20, 1985 EDITION: FINAL 66 SECTION: NEIGHBORS MB PAGE: 3 LENGTH: 47 lines ILLUSTRATION: photo: Anita Barone outside the LOMBARDY INN MOTEL SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: DEBBIE SONTAG Herald Staff Writer FIRE-GUTTED HOTEL NOW AMONG SAFEST The smell of smoke lingers faintly in the lobby. But the Lombardy Inn Motel, scene of a deadly fire Dec. 6, is now open again, and safer than almost any other hotel in Miami Beach, according to Jack Richardson, city fire inspector. "Unfortunately it usually takes an accident for hazards to be corrected, " Richardson said Tuesday. "The Lombardy firetrap has taken an amazing quantum leap forward. " After five months and a $150,000 renovation, the 66-unit motel at 6305 Collins Ave. reopened June 1, secured with up-to- the-minute fire detection equipment. So far the Lombardy's old guests, most of whom were yearly tenants, have not come flocking back to the 37-year-old building, which last December had no fire alarms whatsoever. Anita Barone, 70, a dance instructor at the Casablanca Hotel, is one of seven people who have moved into the Lombardy in the last few weeks. "I'm not afraid, " she said. "It happens tt all the hotels. They all get burned. Fires are a fact of life. " At 1 a.m. Dec. 6, flames spiraled through the Lombardy, injuring 12 guests and killing 75-year-old tenant Ruth Russell. The north hallway of the two-story motel was gutted. Insurersestimated there was $175,000 worth of damage, said motel owner Phyllis Marando. Beach fire authorities found that the motel not only lacked alarms, but contained hazardous wood slat doors, which catch and spread fire easily. Alarms have been required on the Beach and wood slat doors outlawed since 1967. Now, in a lobby still under renovation, the 66 old orange mailboxes behind the front desk have a new neighbor: a bright red metal alarm box labeled "Fire Watch I." The slats of the louvered room doors are blocked with sheet rock. Smoke separation doors in the halls are set to fly shut if the alarm goes off. And hard-wire smoke detectors, positioned at 30-foot intervals, are connected to an alarm system. "We have to make our reputation all over again. A lot of guests got scared off, " Marando said. Not Florence Shapley, 63. She returned to her old room. "My rent for the year was paid, " she said. "I guess if ,they want to give it back to me, I could leave. They have safety things. I'm not so scared."