Gabriel House had seen better days, but for residents and their families, it was the center of a caring community.
The 100-unit assisted-living facility that burned Sunday night, killing nine people, opened in 1999 in Fall River, Massachusetts. Some photos on its Facebook page show neat rooms but older-looking carpeting and furniture. However, the facility had been repeatedly cited for tardiness in reporting potential health and safety incidents, according to regulators' most recent review.
Displaced residents and relatives also have told of substandard conditions, but they say it was a place where people from difficult circumstances found each other.
Some say Gabriel House was emblematic of Fall River — a fiercely proud city despite a yearslong downturn. The city of tight-knit neighborhoods has been shaped by immigrants, including a large population of Portuguese descent, who came to work in textile mills, many of which are long shuttered.
Fall River rallies around Gabriel House
A memorial of candles and balloons grew at the site Tuesday and Wednesday. People held a vigil there, and attendees talked about the importance of community. Krista Cormier, a Fall River resident, said the fire has been ''heavy on my heart all week."
''Anytime something happens, people just come together just because of this,'' Cormier said, beating on her heart. ''This city is full of love and support.''
But there were notes of discord. Gabriel House owner Dennis Etzkorn has said he is cooperating with investigators, but Mayor Paul Coogan said he should have been at the memorial and has criticized him for being hard to reach in the aftermath of the fire.