This is a carousel. Use the Next and Previous buttons to navigate 1 out of 5 The San Francisco Fire Department responded to a fire at 1604 McAllister St. on August 23, 2022. SFFDSShow moreShow less2of5 A San Francisco firefighter climbs onto the roof of 1604 McAllister St. after a three-alarm fire on Aug. 23, 2022. Charles Russo/SFGATEShow MoreShow Less3of54of5 The San Francisco Fire Department responded to a fire at 1604 McAllister St., at the intersection of Divisadero, on August 23, 2022. Charles Russo/SFGATEShow MoreShow Less5of5 More than 100 firefighters responded to a massive fire in a three-story building in San Francisco on Tuesday afternoon, officials said. The San Francisco Fire Department said one woman was taken to the hospital after suffering smoke inhalation. “She’s stable and she’s going to be OK,” Lt. Jonathan Baxter, a department spokesman, told SFGATE. A firefighter also had minor injuries, Baxter said. UPDATE: 3-ALARM AREA FIRE AVOID ON SCENE — OVER 100 FIREFIGHTERS ON SCENE pic.twitter.com/0f7ExX9fTj — SAN FRANCISCO FIRE DEPARTMENT MEDIA (@SFFDPIO) August 23, 2022 The San Francisco Fire Department continued to clean up 1604 McAllister St. after a three-alarm fire that broke out on Tuesday, August 23, 2022. Charles Russo/SFGATE The blaze was reported by the department just after noon in the city’s Western Addition neighborhood at the building at 1604 McAllister St. located on a corner on Divisadero Street. The fire department said on Twitter at 12:19 p.m. that “intense fire” was on the second and third floors of the building, and Baxter later told KCBS radio that flames were throughout the building. “The fire was burning through the roof,” Baxter told KCBS. “Part of the roof fell onto part of the pavement below.” The blaze was reported by the department just after noon in the city’s Western Addition neighborhood at the building at 1604 McAllister St. located on a corner on Divisadero Street. The fire department said on Twitter at 12:19 p.m. that “intense fire” was on the second and third floors of the building, and Baxter later told KCBS radio that flames were throughout the building. “The fire was burning through the roof,” Baxter told KCBS. “Part of the roof fell onto part of the pavement below.” Amy Graff is the news editor for SFGATE. Born and raised in the Bay Area, he got his start in news at the Daily Californian at UC Berkeley, where he studied English literature. He has been with SFGATE for more than 10 years. You can email her at [email protected]