Stanton-by-Dale warehouse demolished after fire
Gary Platts, Derbyshire Fire and Rescue, said it had been “one of the most rapid fires” he had ever seen.
It took almost three hours to bring the blaze under control.
Mr Platts, fire station manager, said: “It burned very, very quickly. Within an hour it had destroyed the roof and burned the entire contents.
Police have been working to determine how the fire started.
The Environment Agency was also consulted after a similar fire last year contaminated water in a nearby canal, causing fish to die.
Derry chip pan fire: two rescued
A neighbour rescued a man in his late teens and a woman in her 30s following a fire at a house in Londonderry.
The fire is believed to have started accidentally in a chip pan.
Two fire crews extinguished the blaze at Yeats Court in Ballymagorarty at around 2330 BST on Sunday.
The teenager was treated by fire crews for burns and the woman and neighbour were treated by paramedics for the effects of breathing in smoke.
All three were taken to hospital by ambulance.
Summercourt fire destroys 37 buses in Western Greyhound fleet
Fire has ripped through a bus depot near Newquay.
The fire has destroyed at least 37 buses – a third of bus firm Western Greyhound’s fleet.
At its height, crews from St Columb, St Dennis, Newquay, St Austell, Perranporth, Wadebridge and Launceston were battling the blaze at Summercourt.
The fire in Summercourt, near Newquay, broke out in the early hours of Monday morning.
In Cornwall about a third of services are not operating or have been delayed, although services are running normally in Devon.
Western Greyhound has been operating buses in both counties since 1998.
It describes itself as a “locally based, family-run business”.
The cause of the fire is being jointly investigated by Devon and Cornwall Police and Cornwall Fire and Rescue Service.
No-one was hurt but almost forty buses have been destroyed.
West Yorkshire and Greater Manchester firefighters tackle moorland fires
At its height, the fire front stretched for more than one mile (1.6km).
Fire service officials hope predicted rainfall will dampen moorland and the weather will help prevent further outbreaks.
Robin Ward, of West Yorkshire Fire and Rescue, said: “It’s very much an on-going situation, we’ll be monitoring it for the next couple of days.
Pete Buckley, from Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service, said crews had been forced to withdraw from the hillside as darkness fell on Tuesday evening “for safety reasons” and were then tasked with protecting “isolated local buildings”.
Windsor building partially collapses during major fire
More than 80 firefighters tackled a blaze in Windsor which began at about 22:00 BST on Tuesday.
The building partially collapsed following the major fire .
About 12 people were forced to move to temporary accommodation for the night owing to the fire’s close proximity to residential properties.
The upper floors of the building – the usage and owners of which have not yet been established – partially collapsed along with the surrounding scaffolding.
Crews came from Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, London, Oxfordshire and Surrey to fight the fire, while police were required to manage crowds of onlookers.
The fire service cordoned off the area and said it expected to be on-site for several hours.
As yet there is no indication as to the cause of the fire.
No-one was injured in the blaze.