Maryland Sinkhole Nearly Swallows Two Cars
A 12-inch water main break in Bladensburg, Md., created the sinkhole.
-- Two cars partially fell into a sinkhole in a Washington, D.C., suburb early Tuesday morning after a water main break.
A Bladensburg, Maryland, family was forced to leave around 4 a.m. after discovering water in their home, a Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission spokeswoman told ABC News.
When the family, which included a father and his 8-year-old son and 4-year-old and 6-month-old daughters, backed their car out of the driveway, they hit a sinkhole that had been hidden by overflowing water.
The father, identified by The Associated Press as Darwin Mendoza, said the family escaped the car and watched as the sinkhole grew.
Other families in the neighborhood were rushed out of their homes after the break in the 12-inch main caused water to spill everywhere.
"The cars have been pulled out of the sinkhole and we are in the process of repairing the broken pipe," Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission spokeswoman Lyn Riggins told ABC News.
Nearly 80 homes and businesses in the area were without water but should have water restored by tonight, according to Riggins.
"The only family that is displaced is the family that lost their car and we are working with them to stay in a hotel," Riggins said.
The commission has responded to 400 water main breaks in the area this month alone, according to Riggins. There are normally around 1,700 water main breaks in the area annually.
"This break was likely caused by a combination of the pipe's age and the cold weather," Riggins said. "The pipe was 90-years-old and fluctuation in temperature plays a big role in causing water main breaks."