Metro

NYC’s 5-day heat wave turns deadly as one person succumbs to heat exposure

One person has 𓃲died in the Big Apple’s  heat wave.

The city Medical Examiner’s office said Saturday that one person succumbed to heat exposure as New York City sweltered under its fifth straight day in the 90s.

The unidentified victim also suffered from heart disease and pulmonary emphysema, according to the ME’s office, which did not provide further details.

The thermometer topped out at 94 degrees Saturday afternoon in Central Park, with “real feel” temperatures at around 98 degrees. The dangerous heat is predicted to climb even higher on Sunday.

Sunday’s top temperature is forecast to be a sizzling 98 degrees, which would break the record of 97 degrees set on the date in 2010.

Temperatures rose to 94 degrees Saturday afternoon. J.C.Rice for NY Post

With increased humidity, it’s going to feel like 100 to 106 degrees, said Marissa Lautenbacher, a Fox Weather meteorologist.

“It’s going to feel swampy. Kind of muggy,” Lautenbacher said. “The air’s feeling soupy, which makes it really hard for people to cool off.”

Monday will again bring temps in the low 90s, with the heat not breaking until storms roll in that night, Lautenb𝕴acher. If the forecast for Sunday and Monday holds, the heat wave will stretch to seven days, the longest stretch of such temperatures in the city in nine years. 

On Tuesday, the high is expected to⭕ get to a balmy 87🌠.

The city’s heat wave is expected to extend into next week. Matthew McDermott for NY Post

Con Edison said energy usage reached 10,059 megawatts by 2 p.m. Saturday, far below the utility’s 13,322 megawatt record hit during the 2013 heat wave. Some 60 New York City customers were experiencing heat-related power outages as of mid-afternoon, the utility said.

NYCHA said it had generators at the Ingersoll Houses in Brooklyn to deal with an elevator outage connected to t𓂃he heat.

An air quality health advisory was in effect for Saturday and Sunday and a heat advisory wasn’t set to expire until 8 p.m. Sunday.

Heat warnings and advisories were in place across the country this weekend, impacting more than 77 million Americans. Europeans were also sweltering under extreme heat and wildfires broke out at a tourist destination in Greece Saturday.

Dr. Elan Levy, the medical director at Lenox Hi🌊ll Hospital in Manhattan, said it was best to avoid going outside during the hottest times of the day and that anyone experiencing symptoms including a headache, dizziness, confusion. excessive sweating and muscle cramps should go to a cool place. The city operates at libraries, senior centers, NYCHA facilities and communi👍ty centers in all five boroughs.

“If your symptoms aren’t getting better after removing yourselves from a hot environment then you might want to seek medical care,” Levy said.

The scorching temperatures led many New Yorkers to flock to the beach Saturday, only to be told to get out of the water at Rockaway Beach after shark sightings in the mid-afternoon.

“We will reopen the beach when it is safe to do so,” the Parks Department at 2:14 p.m.

The shark sightin💯gs ღcame just as the new Rockaway Rocket express ferry service began from Lower Manhattan to the beach.

NYC’s heat wave extended to its fifth day Saturday — and turned deadly as one person succumbed to heat exposure. Stephen Yang for NY Post

“Unbearable. I can’t wait for the spring,” Tatianna Rodriguez, 35, a Bronx resident, said before biting into an ice cream bar𒁏 at a packed Jacob Riis Park in the Rockaways Sunday.

Shanice London, 27, a Harlem resident, came to J🐻acob Riis Saturday but said she did not plan to go outside at all Sundayꦕ.

“Brutal. It’s very much brutal. You need to be able to hydrate and focus on cool thoughts. Cool energy to go with the hotness,” London said of the heat while sitting on a water cooler and using a hand fan before hitting the sand.

Isabelle Shen, 27, a Manhattan resident, sat on the beach like a﷽ hermit crab with a towel covering her face and body.

“Why do I have a towel over my head? Because it’s hot and it’s the best way to stay cool,” she said. “My plan for tomorrow is to stay inside. I’m an avid rock climber, so I’ll just go to the gym.”

West Village resident Rei Tran, 26, said she has strategized when to take out her 7-ye𒐪ar-old Jack Russell terrier in order to keep cool.

“I wait for a cloud to come a💃nd walk my dog. I retreat to my home when the cloud goes away and the sun returns,” sai൲d Tran, who was at Jacob Riis Saturday under an umbrella. She noted the dog was in a better position because she was at home in the air conditioning.