(New throughout, updates to 14 the number people pulled from rubble, adds local media report that 1 among 14 is dead)
By Dave Warner
PHILADELPHIA, June 5 (Reuters) - A building collapsed in downtown Philadelphia on Wednesday and rescue workers pulled 14 people from mountains of crushed concrete and splintered wood, using search dogs to scour the rubble for others, fire officials said.
Thirteen victims were rushed to area hospitals, said Philadelphia Fire Commissioner Lloyd Ayers, who declined to comment on local media reports that the 14th died in the collapse.
A four-story building under demolition collapsed onto a neighboring two-story Salvation Army Thrift Store at 2140 Market Street at 10:45 a.m., trapping people under debris, Ayers said.
Those pulled from the rubble suffered minor injuries and were taken to area hospitals where they were in stable condition, he said.
One witness, Dan Gillis, 31, of Cinnaminson, New Jersey, a construction worker on a job across the street, told Reuters he saw a crane remove a supporting beam from the front of the building, and then the wall next to the thrift store started swaying.
Another witness, Jeffrey Fehnel, 48, of Philadelphia, said about the same time a backhoe hit the rear side of the building.
"The building came down. It was like a big blast," Fehnel told Reuters.
Authorities said the cause of the collapse was still under investigation.
Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter said rescue workers were searching for more survivors. The incident occurred at 22nd and Market streets in the heart of Philadelphia's Center City.
A witness told Reuters the building collapse shook the ground and knocked a man off his feet on the sidewalk outside the thrift store.
"It was ground-shaking. The shaking of the ground made the man fall down," said Jordan McLaughlin, 18, of Philadelphia.
Police urged the public to stay away from the area while rescuers dug through the rubble. (Reporting by Barbara Goldberg; Editing by Maureen Bavdek, John Wallace and David Gregorio)
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