- February 22, 2026
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A three-alarm fire that brought first responders from Longboat Key and adjoining communities in Sarasota and Manatee counties destroyed two adjoining north-end villas in the Land’s End community on Monday.
Longboat Key Fire Chief Paul Dezzi said a housekeeper working inside first noticed a fire in electrical outlet at the residence in the 600 block of Lands End Drive around 10 a.m., and got out of the home safely. No injuries were reported, and no one else was in the three-story building that comprises two separate living units.
“No firefighters were injured, and it didn’t extend from this major structure to another,’’ Dezzi said. “The unfortunate part is both homes are completely destroyed.’’

Property records indicate the building is owned by a New Hampshire couple, who bought the building in 2011.
Adrian Griffin who works nearby and lives down the street from the building said she was alerted to the fire after noticing multiple emergency vehicles pass her work with sirens blaring. She returned to her neighborhood to see smoke billowing out of the roof of the building, spiraling out as wind consistently blew.

Don Sensabaugh lives next door in a similar duplex and said he was alerted to the fire by his neighbor who told him he noticed smoke. He walked outside to let the fire department through the gates at about 10 a.m. Sensabaugh said he saw the fire department break the door down to gain entrance to the building. A ladder truck was deployed to give firefighters access to the roof where they cut holes with chainsaws to allow heat to escape the structure.
“Heat rises, and we saw smoke coming off the eaves of the structure. So once it was a safe environment, we asked the truck company to go up on the roof and cut a hole, what we cal a trench cut, to expose the rafters and wood and what have you so we could go ahead and put the fire out,” Dezzi said.
The fire started a little before 10 a.m. and was extinguished at about noon.
Dezzi said the town’s fire marshal would examine the building to try to determine a cause of the fire.