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Pipes Collapse At Indiana Rolls-Royce Plant, No Injuries Reported

The collapse Friday left a 200-foot-long line of large pipes and support structures toppled outside a building.

This photo provided by the Wayne Township Fire Department shows a network of large pipes and support structures that collapsed at a Rolls-Royce aircraft-engine assembly plant in Indianapolis, Friday, Aug. 4, 2017. A Rolls Royce spokesman said there were no injuries. (Michael D. Pruitt/Wayne Township Fire Department via AP)
This photo provided by the Wayne Township Fire Department shows a network of large pipes and support structures that collapsed at a Rolls-Royce aircraft-engine assembly plant in Indianapolis, Friday, Aug. 4, 2017. A Rolls Royce spokesman said there were no injuries. (Michael D. Pruitt/Wayne Township Fire Department via AP)

Authorities say no one was injured when a network of pipes collapsed outside a Rolls-Royce aircraft-engine assembly plant in Indianapolis.

The collapse Friday left a 200-foot-long line of large pipes and support structures toppled outside a building.

Rolls-Royce spokesman Joel Reuter says some of the pipes carry steam and one carries pressurized air for testing jet engines. He says that pipe was funneling air into a building to test jet engines by simulating air flows at 20,000 feet when the collapse occurred.

This photo provided by the Wayne Township Fire Department shows a network of large pipes and support structures that collapsed at a Rolls-Royce aircraft-engine assembly plant in Indianapolis, Friday, Aug. 4, 2017. A Rolls Royce spokesman said there were no injuries. (Michael D. Pruitt/Wayne Township Fire Department via AP)This photo provided by the Wayne Township Fire Department shows a network of large pipes and support structures that collapsed at a Rolls-Royce aircraft-engine assembly plant in Indianapolis, Friday, Aug. 4, 2017. A Rolls Royce spokesman said there were no injuries. (Michael D. Pruitt/Wayne Township Fire Department via AP)

Reuter says that pipe may have caused the collapse.

Wayne Township fire officials say a high-pressure air release apparently hurled part of that pipe several hundred feet, heavily damaging a small plant building.

Rolls-Royce employs about 4,000 workers in Indianapolis who assemble engines for military and commercial aircraft.

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