EV battery singled out in major fire at GM design centre

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More than 100 firefighters battled a blaze at the General Motors Advanced Design Studio in California earlier this week, which destroyed at least one priceless concept car and took almost eight hours to extinguish.

The fire, according to US publication Car and Driver, started at 5:50pm local time on Wednesday (October 22), and took around seven-and-a-half hours to be declared officially extinguished. 

Nobody was injured during the fire.

Reports suggested lithium-ion battery packs and petrol-powered prototypes were part of the ignition source of the fire, however, an investigation to confirm the cause is yet to be completed. 

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2025 Corvette concept

“The isolated fire was contained to a single design concept vehicle and did not spread to any other vehicles, design concepts, or the building itself,” GM told Car and Driver.

Lithium-ion batteries are known to pose unique challenges to firefighters, since they can generate temperatures of up to 1000 degrees Celsius during ‘thermal runway’, as well as toxic gas emissions. 

As well as the electrified vehicles themselves, lithium-ion battery fires have caused significant damage to and losses within nearby vehicles and building structures. 

A major transport company banned electric vehicles (EVs) and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEV) from its cargo ships in July 2025, citing safety concerns after a rival company lost a vessel that was ferrying EVs and hybrids from China to Mexico.