Skip to content
Campus Alert Archive
Iowa

A 3:30 AM Sprinkler Save in Daum Hall: A Burned-Out Room and Two Floors of Water Damage

IAfireemergency notificationhigh confidence
Confirmed Threat

At approximately 3:30 AM CST on November 6, 2025, a small fire ignited in an unoccupied room of Daum Residence Hall at the University of Iowa, prompting an evacuation of the building. The room's sprinkler system contained the fire but caused water damage to the first and second floors. No injuries were reported, and most students returned to their rooms by morning. Fire investigators later determined the cause was unintentional but could not pinpoint the exact ignition source.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
0
Injured
0
Institution
University of Iowa
Public R1 · IA
~31,000 studentsHawk Alert
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence

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 ALERTSMS
Approximate reconstruction136 chars
Hawk Alert: Fire in Daum Residence Hall, 225 N. Clinton St. Evacuate the building immediately. Avoid the area. More: emergency.uiowa.edu

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

Reconstructed; the alert was issued shortly after the 3:30 AM CST call to Iowa City Fire Department
Daum Residence Hall is at 225 N. Clinton Street and is part of the University of Iowa's residence hall system on the north end of campus
The Hawk Alert was paired with internal building fire alarms; the alert reached residents via SMS, email, push, and the campus emergency website
ALL CLEAREmail
Approximate reconstruction229 chars
Hawk Alert: The fire in Daum Residence Hall has been extinguished. Most residents may return to their rooms. Some residents will be temporarily relocated due to water damage from the sprinkler system. Updates: emergency.uiowa.edu

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

Reconstructed; the all-clear came after Iowa City Fire confirmed the fire was contained to a single unoccupied room
The phrase 'most residents may return' acknowledges that a subset of students remained displaced due to water damage from sprinkler discharge
The all-clear message references continued displacement of some students rather than a blanket return-to-normal status
Context

Background

The University of Iowa is a public R1 doctoral institution with about 31,000 students. In the early morning hours of Thursday, November 6, 2025, at approximately 3:30 AM CST, a small fire ignited in an unoccupied room of Daum Residence Hall, located at 225 N. Clinton Street on the north end of campus. The room's automatic sprinkler system activated and contained the fire, but the resulting discharge caused water damage to the first and second floors of the building. The Iowa City Fire Department responded along with University of Iowa Public Safety, evacuated the building, and confirmed the fire was extinguished. No injuries were reported. Most residents were able to return to their rooms by morning, but a small number were temporarily displaced due to water damage. Fire investigators later determined the cause was unintentional but could not identify the precise ignition source because the fire heavily damaged the area of origin. The Daum Hall fire was a textbook example of sprinkler-system efficacy: a fire that could have spread across an entire dorm wing was contained to a single room — a marked improvement over pre-2000 sprinkler-mandate residence-hall fires like the Boland Hall tragedy at Seton Hall.
Analysis

Key Findings

The sprinkler system contained the fire to a single room — a textbook demonstration of post-Seton Hall sprinkler-mandate efficacy in residence halls
Water damage from the activated sprinkler caused the most significant residential disruption, displacing more students than the fire itself — a common pattern in modern sprinkler-system-equipped buildings
Fire investigators determined the cause was unintentional but could not identify the source, illustrating the forensic challenge of investigating fires that occur in heavily-burned but small areas
The 3:30 AM timing — when residents are asleep — underscores the critical role of automatic detection and suppression systems in residence halls
Outcome
No injuries occurred. The Iowa City Fire Department, Iowa City Police, and University of Iowa Public Safety responded. The fire was contained to a single unoccupied room by the activated sprinkler system. Water damage from the sprinkler affected the first and second floors of the building. Most residents were able to return to their rooms by morning; a small number remained displaced. The cause of the fire was determined to be unintentional, but investigators were unable to identify the exact source because the fire heavily damaged the area of origin.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
  2. Official
  3. Student Paper
  4. News
  5. News
  6. News
Tags
fireresidence-halliowapublic-r1hawk-alertsprinkler-savewater-damageearly-morningdaum-hall
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion