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Campus Alert Archive
LUNO

New Orleans Water Main Break Kills Pressure, Takes Down Boilers, and Closes Loyola's Entire Campus

LAwater contaminationadvisorymedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

On Monday, February 23, 2026, a water main break on Claiborne Avenue and Toledano Street caused a precautionary boil water advisory for a large portion of Uptown New Orleans, including Loyola University's main campus. Low water pressure forced the university to take its boiler system offline to prevent damage, leaving campus buildings without hot water and heat. Loyola moved all operations to remote mode, closing academic and administrative buildings to all except essential personnel while residential students received emergency communications about dining alternatives.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
0
Injured
0
Institution
Loyola University New Orleans
Private Masters · LA
~4,200 studentsLoyola Emergency Notification
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTEmail
Approximate reconstruction728 chars
Loyola University New Orleans is moving to remote operations today, Monday, February 23, due to low water pressure resulting from a water main break affecting Uptown New Orleans. Academic and administrative buildings are closed to all except essential personnel. A precautionary boil water advisory is in effect for our campus. Do not drink, make ice, or brush teeth using tap water. Boil water before consuming. Our boiler system has been taken offline to prevent equipment damage, so hot water and heat are currently unavailable in campus buildings. Residential students will receive separate communication about campus dining hours and other essential services. Bottled water is being provided to students residing on campus.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Taking the boiler system offline to protect equipment is a cascading effect rarely captured in standard emergency alerts -- it means the water pressure loss created both a contamination advisory and a loss of heat.
The specific instruction to provide bottled water to residential students reflects the university's obligation to students who cannot simply go home during a campus closure.
ALL CLEAREmail
Approximate reconstruction387 chars
The boil water advisory affecting Loyola University's campus has been lifted. Water pressure has been restored following repairs to the water main break on Claiborne Avenue. Our boiler system is back online and hot water and heat are being restored to campus buildings. Normal in-person operations will resume tomorrow. Thank you for your flexibility and patience during this disruption.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

The all-clear sequence -- main repaired, boiler restarted, pressure confirmed -- illustrates how infrastructure failures create cascading dependencies that extend recovery timelines.
New Orleans experienced at least five major water main breaks in early 2026; this Claiborne break was among the largest in terms of geographic impact.
Context

Background

New Orleans has among the oldest water distribution infrastructure in the United States, with many mains dating to the mid-20th century or earlier. The Claiborne Avenue water main break on February 23, 2026 caused flooding at the intersection of Claiborne and Toledano and dropped water pressure below the threshold required to sustain normal campus operations, triggering a precautionary boil water advisory for Uptown neighborhoods including Loyola's campus. Loyola moved to fully remote operations because the low pressure also forced facilities staff to shut down the campus boiler system -- a protective measure to avoid equipment damage -- leaving residential buildings without heat and hot water. The Loyola Maroon student paper reported that this was one of five major water pipe breaks in New Orleans in the first months of 2026, reflecting a pattern of accelerating infrastructure decay. Residential students received bottled water while the advisory remained in effect. Loyola's emergency page at emergency.loyno.edu tracked the situation status in real time, noting both the campus closure and the timeline for boiler system restart after pressure was restored. Neighboring Tulane University, also in Uptown New Orleans, was similarly affected by the advisory.
Analysis

Key Findings

Claiborne Avenue water main break on February 23, 2026 triggered boil water advisory for Uptown New Orleans including Loyola's campus.
Low water pressure forced campus boiler system offline, creating a concurrent loss of heat and hot water on top of the contamination advisory.
Loyola moved to fully remote operations; academic and administrative buildings closed except for essential personnel.
Residential students received bottled water; campus dining hours adjusted.
One of at least five major New Orleans water main breaks in early 2026.
Outcome
Water pressure was restored after repairs to the Claiborne Avenue main were completed. The boil water advisory was lifted once testing confirmed no bacterial contamination. Campus returned to in-person operations. The incident was one of at least five major water pipe breaks in New Orleans in the first months of 2026.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Student Paper
  2. Student Paper
  3. News
  4. Official
  5. Student Paper
Tags
boil-water-advisorywater-main-breakremote-operationsboiler-failureinfrastructure-failurenew-orleanslouisiana2026
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion