Pittsburgh Allegheny

Hulton Road reopened after truck crashes, dumps load on street

Dillon Carr
Slide 1
Dillon Carr | Tribune-Review
A dump truck crashed and tipped over on Hulton Road in Oakmont on Tuesday, May 28, 2019.
Slide 2
Dillon Carr | Tribune-Review
A dump truck crashed and tipped over on Hulton Road in Oakmont on Tuesday, May 28, 2019.
Slide 3
Dan Speicher | Tribune-Review
Crews work to recover a triple-axle truck that reportedly lost its brakes as it was heading down the hill and crashed into two homes along Hulton Road, near Dalzell Lane, in Oakmont on Tuesday, May 28, 2019.
Slide 4
Dan Speicher | Tribune-Review
Crews work to recover a triple-axle truck that reportedly lost its brakes as it was heading down the hill and crashed into two homes along Hulton Road, near Dalzell Lane, in Oakmont on Tuesday, May 28, 2019.
Slide 5
Dan Speicher | Tribune-Review
Crews work to recover a triple-axle truck that reportedly lost its brakes as it was heading down the hill and crashed into two homes along Hulton Road, near Dalzell Lane, in Oakmont on Tuesday, May 28, 2019.
Slide 6
Dan Speicher | Tribune-Review
Crews work to recover a triple-axle truck that reportedly lost its brakes as it was heading down the hill and crashed into two homes along Hulton Road, near Dalzell Lane, in Oakmont on Tuesday, May 28, 2019.
Slide 7
Dan Speicher | Tribune-Review
Crews work to recover a triple-axle truck that reportedly lost its brakes as it was heading down the hill and crashed into two homes along Hulton Road, near Dalzell Lane, in Oakmont on Tuesday, May 28, 2019.
Slide 8
Dan Speicher | Tribune-Review
Crews work to recover a triple-axle truck that reportedly lost its brakes as it was heading down the hill and crashed into two homes along Hulton Road, near Dalzell Lane, in Oakmont on Tuesday, May 28, 2019.
Slide 9
Dan Speicher | Tribune-Review
Crews work to recover a triple-axle truck that reportedly lost its brakes as it was heading down the hill and crashed into two homes along Hulton Road, near Dalzell Lane, in Oakmont on Tuesday, May 28, 2019.
Slide 10
Dan Speicher | Tribune-Review
Crews work to recover a triple-axle truck that reportedly lost its brakes as it was heading down the hill and crashed into two homes along Hulton Road, near Dalzell Lane, in Oakmont on Tuesday, May 28, 2019.
Slide 11
Dan Speicher | Tribune-Review
Crews work to recover a triple-axle truck that reportedly lost its brakes as it was heading down the hill and crashed into two homes along Hulton Road, near Dalzell Lane, in Oakmont on Tuesday, May 28, 2019.
Slide 12
Dan Speicher | Tribune-Review
Crews work to recover a triple-axle truck that reportedly lost its brakes as it was heading down the hill and crashed into two homes along Hulton Road, near Dalzell Lane, in Oakmont on Tuesday, May 28, 2019.

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A dump truck lost its brakes and crashed Tuesday on Oakmont’s Hulton Road, closing the busy street to traffic into the evening.

The wreck, reported about 1 p.m., closed Hulton between Fifth Street and Allegheny River Boulevard.

Oakmont police Chief Mike Ford said no one was injured in the crash.

Hulton remained closed for hours, reopening after 9 p.m.

It appeared the truck lost its brakes as it traveled toward the Hulton Bridge, according to William Albright, the Emergency Management Agency coordinator for Oakmont. The driver tried to slow the truck before reaching the intersection before the bridge, but crashed into the porch of a house in the 300 block of Hulton Road and severed a power pole, he said.

The entire block was without power as crews worked to repair the downed lines, Albright said.

Albright said natural gas lines also were shut off as a precaution were inspected as part of the site cleanup.

Traffic was diverted off Hulton to Virginia Avenue and then onto Allegheny River Boulevard.

Joe Bucci of Oakmont said he heard a “big boom” as he worked outside nearby.

“I thought it was a truck’s tailgate coming down,” he said while watching crews clean up debris that had spilled onto the street. “But, when I came around the corner and saw it, I thought ‘Oh my God.’ ”

Tom Meising, also of Oakmont, said the wreck could have been much worse.

“I think he did a good job laying (the truck) down — nobody got hurt. If he would have gone into somebody, that would have been tremendously detrimental,” he said.

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