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UCLA under water after 10 million gallons explode from water main

"For somebody to try and boogie board in this, it's just going to be an asphalt bath," says firefighter.

By Matt Bradwell
Students Taylor Alberete (L) and Christiana Konkol frolic in a flooded Drake Stadium after a 93-year-old, 30-inch-diameter water main ruptured north of UCLA today, blasting a geyser of water through Sunset Boulevard and sending an estimated 8 million to 10 million gallons cascading down the street and inundating a number of vehicles as it made its way onto the university grounds in Los Angeles on July 29, 2014. UPI/Jim Ruymen
1 of 6 | Students Taylor Alberete (L) and Christiana Konkol frolic in a flooded Drake Stadium after a 93-year-old, 30-inch-diameter water main ruptured north of UCLA today, blasting a geyser of water through Sunset Boulevard and sending an estimated 8 million to 10 million gallons cascading down the street and inundating a number of vehicles as it made its way onto the university grounds in Los Angeles on July 29, 2014. UPI/Jim Ruymen | License Photo

LOS ANGELES, July 30 (UPI) -- A water main exploded near the University of California-Los Angeles Tuesday afternoon, flooding much of the campus, Sunset Boulevard and Pauley Pavilion.

The 93-year-old pipe exploded at roughly 3:30 p.m., sending a geyser some 20 feet into the air just as rush hour was getting underway, diverting traffic and creating major problems around campus. Although no injuries were reported, flood waters were shin-deep in places, with students boogie boarding around campus and sliding down wet railings.

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"That is probably one of the most dangerous things you can do," Los Angeles Fire Department Capt. Jaime Moore told the Los Angeles Times. "For somebody to try and boogie board in this, it's just going to be an asphalt bath."

"People are standing in the water almost out of a sense of amusement," echoed fellow firefighter Brian Humphrey to KTLA.

"It doesn't take much more than an ankle depth of water to sweep somebody into harm's way, so we're hoping to get UCLA campus officials to move people here away ... from this very dramatic cascade of water."

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All told, officials estimate between eight and ten million gallons of water flooded the area before the water was finally shut off.

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