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Campus Alert Archive
UMass Amherst

An Unintended Chemical Reaction in the Physical Sciences Building — and a Regional Hazmat Call to Brand-New UMass

MAhazmatadvisoryhigh confidence
Confirmed Threat

On the evening of Monday, August 1, 2022, an unintended chemical reaction in a laboratory at the Physical Sciences Building at UMass Amherst produced an unknown vapor. Someone pulled a fire alarm. The Amherst Fire Department evacuated the building, called in the regional District 4 Hazardous Materials Emergency Response team, and ran an assessment that concluded later that night. No injuries reported, no significant damage. The Physical Sciences Building had opened only six years earlier.

Alerts
3
Response
Killed
Injured
Institution
University of Massachusetts Amherst
Public R1 · MA
~32,000 studentsUMass Alerts
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

3 messages in sequence · 1 verified verbatim

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 ALERTfire-alarm
Building fire alarm — Physical Sciences Building, UMass Amherst, 690 North Pleasant Street. Unintended chemical reaction reported in laboratory with unknown vapor. Building self-evacuating. Amherst Fire requesting District 4 Hazardous Materials Emergency Response Team.

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

The Physical Sciences Building opened in 2018 — a $101 million, 95,000-square-foot facility shared by the Department of Chemistry and the Department of Physics, the first major new chemistry building on the UMass Amherst campus in decades
Massachusetts organizes hazmat response by 'districts'; District 4 covers Hampshire, Hampden, and Franklin counties and is hosted out of South Hadley
The phrase 'unintended chemical reaction' is the standard EH&S term for any unplanned reaction — it does not necessarily imply researcher error and can include sample decomposition during storage
UPDATEpress-statement
There were no injuries and no significant damage following an unintended chemical reaction that occurred in a lab at the Physical Sciences Building on Monday evening. The Amherst Fire Department was called and, due to the unknown vapor, AFD evacuated the building. AFD called in the regional Hazardous Materials Emergency Response Division (HAZMAT) team to evaluate the matter. An assessment was concluded and the incident was resolved later Monday night.
This text is the UMass Amherst news-office statement as preserved by the Daily Hampshire Gazette — not an alert SMS but the university's primary public communication
The careful framing 'unintended chemical reaction' rather than 'spill' or 'accident' is deliberate: it signals that the chemicals were where they should be but reacted unexpectedly
UMass Amherst did not issue a UMass Alert SMS — the standard pattern for lab incidents that don't pose community-wide risk
ALL CLEARpress-statement
The Physical Sciences Building has been cleared for reentry by the Amherst Fire Department and the Hazardous Materials Emergency Response Team. No injuries were reported. The building's ventilation system has been verified and normal operations will resume.

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

Daily Hampshire Gazette reported the same night that the incident had concluded; the precise reentry language is reconstructed
Ventilation verification is the standard final step before a chemistry building is allowed to reopen post-hazmat
The District 4 Hazmat Team had actually drilled on this building in 2018 — see UMass News, May 2018
Context

Background

UMass Amherst's Physical Sciences Building opened in 2018 at 690 North Pleasant Street as a $101 million, four-story, 95,000-square-foot facility shared between the chemistry and physics departments. It was the first major new physical-sciences research building on the UMass Amherst campus since Goessmann and Lederle decades earlier. The building was designed with the kind of compartmentalized ventilation, chemical-vapor detection, and dedicated emergency power that modern lab codes require — and was the subject of a regional hazmat training exercise in May 2018, in which the District 4 team practiced exactly the response that played out four years later. On the evening of Monday, August 1, 2022, an unintended chemical reaction in one laboratory produced an unknown vapor. A fire alarm was pulled. The Amherst Fire Department evacuated the building. Because the vapor was not immediately identifiable, AFD escalated to the regional Hazardous Materials Emergency Response Division — the Massachusetts District 4 team — which entered in PPE, ran air-quality assessment, and confirmed there was no broader release. By late evening the building was clear. UMass's news office issued a measured statement to the Daily Hampshire Gazette: no injuries, no significant damage, building reopened. No UMass Alert was sent. The case illustrates a recurring pattern at public-R1 chemistry buildings: a single-room event triggers a multi-agency hazmat response — Amherst Fire, District 4 regional, UMass EH&S, UMass police — that looks dramatic but resolves quickly because the building's engineering contains the actual hazard. The contrast with the older Goessmann Laboratory ammonia leak of March 23, 2011, in which a faulty valve closed the building for six hours and required removal of a full ammonia tank by a private contractor, is instructive: the newer building's response time was hours instead of most of a day.
Analysis

Key Findings

The District 4 regional hazmat team had drilled on the Physical Sciences Building in May 2018, four years before the August 2022 incident — a clear case where pre-incident exercises paid off in compressed response time
UMass Amherst declined to issue a UMass Alert SMS for a single-laboratory event with no community-wide risk, communicating instead via a Gazette statement — the same pattern observed at Northeastern, MIT, and Stanford for similar events
The phrase 'unintended chemical reaction' (rather than 'spill' or 'accident') signals that the chemicals were properly stored and handled but reacted unexpectedly — an important distinction for institutional liability and for understanding underlying causes
Outcome
No injuries, no significant damage. The building was evacuated, ventilated, and cleared the same evening after the Massachusetts District 4 Hazmat Team completed its assessment.
Provenance

Sources

  1. News
  2. Official
  3. Official
  4. Official
Tags
hazmatchemical-reactionunintended-reactionphysical-sciences-buildingumassdistrict-4-hazmatno-injuriespublic-r1no-alert-sentevacuation
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion