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Guymon Apartment Fire Displaces Residents, Damages Building at Apache Trace Complex

A roof collapse at Guymon's Apache Trace Apartments left multiple families without homes after fire tore through Building H on Monday afternoon.

Marcus Williams2 min read
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Guymon Apartment Fire Displaces Residents, Damages Building at Apache Trace Complex
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The roof of Building H at Apache Trace Apartments collapsed Monday after fire tore through the structure, forcing residents out with little warning and drawing emergency crews that worked the scene well into the night.

Firefighters were called to the complex at 1301 E. Highway 3 in Guymon at approximately 4 p.m. on April 6. Texas County Emergency Management, the Texas County Sheriff's Office, and local fire crews all responded. Photos released by local agencies showed flames burning through the roof before it gave way entirely, leaving the building structurally compromised and its units inaccessible.

No final count of uninhabitable units or official damage estimate had been released by Friday. What the photos and agency statements confirmed: multiple households lost access to their homes, with at least some tenants needing immediate shelter and clothing.

Texas County Emergency Management directed displaced residents to the Methodist Clothing Ministry at 7th and Quinn, which opened Monday to provide clothing and basic assistance. Officials signaled that information on donation channels, shelter alternatives, and a central contact point for affected tenants would follow once investigators cleared the scene.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The cause of the fire had not been confirmed as of Friday. Fire investigators and building inspectors were documenting damage and establishing the origin before any units could be declared safe for reoccupancy. Building H remained restricted to the public while that process continued.

Apache Trace is among Guymon's larger apartment communities. When a multi-unit building goes offline in a town with limited rental inventory, displaced families face a narrow set of options: temporary housing costs, longer commutes, or relocating to another town entirely. The property management company still faces insurance, inspection, and repair timelines that can stretch for weeks or months.

Officials asked the public to stay clear of the complex through Monday evening to give crews room to work, with further updates expected from local emergency management once investigators confirmed cause and scope.

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