Hydrant Maintenance

During a fire, every second counts and firefighters need fire hydrants to be
ready when they arrive on the scene of a fire.
It takes 20 turns with a two- or three-foot wrench to open a fire hydrant.
Because of this, Fire Code requires a clear three-foot radius around a fire
hydrant.
Some homeowners plant trees or landscape by a fire hydrant to make the area more
attractive, but residents need to keep this area clear. If there is a fire,
firefighters need to be able to reach and use the hydrant. Plants will be
trampled and a tree or a fence too close will be cut down.
In the winter, the Fire Department asks that residents who have a hydrant on
their property shovel around it to maintain the three-foot radius. When there is
a fire, firefighters don’t have time to find and dig out a hydrant.
In addition to keeping the area around fire hydrants clear, Edina residents can
help firefighters and the Public Works Department by volunteering to paint a
hydrant. There are 1,800 fire hydrants in the City of Edina. Public Works crews
try to paint one-third of them each year.
Volunteer to Paint a Hydrant
Public Works will give paint to anyone interested in re-painting a fire hydrant
– or two – whether it is in your lawn, down the street or four blocks away. It
takes one can of fire-hydrant-red spray paint to paint a hydrant and a resident
can arrange to pick up the paint at the Public Works Building, 5146 Eden Ave.
If you or your organization/group would like to volunteer to paint a hydrant or
to inquire about whether one on your property should be painted, call the Edina
Public Works Department at 952-826-0376 or the Edina Fire Department at
952-826-0378.
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