NEW YORK -- Officials suspect a recently disconnected stove may have caused an apparent gas explosion Saturday that killed a woman and injured three others in Brooklyn.

City Fire Commissioner Daniel Nigro said firefighters received a call around 1 p.m. reporting an explosion at a building in the Borough Park neighbourhood. When emergency crews arrived, they found the entire front of the three-story building blown into the street, he said at a news conference Saturday evening.

Officials suspect the explosion originated in an apartment on the second floor, where a tenant had recently disconnected a stove. The fire commissioner said no one had reported smelling gas in the area.

"We are told that the tenant purchased a high-end stove and they were moving out of the apartment and were going to take that stove with them," Nigro said.

Councilman Brad Lander said the tenant who lived in that apartment had moved out about a week ago.

Lander said the woman who died was a tenant in her 60s who was originally from the Dominican Republic. He said the woman lived in a third-floor apartment with her daughter, who was out of town at the time.

The victim's body was discovered in a stairwell near the second floor, close to the apartment where the explosion started, Nigro said. Her name was not immediately released.

A man and his son who were walking by the building when it exploded were injured. A 27-year-old passer-by also was injured. Officials said the three had been hit by flying debris; their injuries were considered not life-threatening.

Officials said at a news conference the man was 33 and the boy was 10, and police later gave the man's age as 34 and the boy's as 9. There was no immediate explanation for the discrepancy.

Authorities are still trying to track down another person who lived in the building. Mayor Bill de Blasio said officials just wanted to confirm the person was not home at the time.

Neighbour Harry Roth said a sign sprang off the building's storefront before "the front of the building fell off and it started burning."

Shimon Fried was about five blocks away when he heard a boom.

"I just saw plumes of smoke coming out," he said. "It was scary."

The blast rocked the largely Orthodox Jewish neighbourhood in the middle of a Sabbath afternoon.

De Blasio, speaking on cable news station NY1, said the Sabbath could have saved lives because there are less people walking in the neighbourhood.

"Had it been the next day it would have been a much worse situation," he said.

A spokeswoman for National Grid declined to comment on the mayor's remarks, but said the utility was assisting in the ongoing investigation.

A message left at a possible phone number for the building's owner wasn't immediately returned.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo issued a statement saying the explosion was "the latest in a disturbing trend of incidents." He said he ordered the state's Department of Public Service, the agency that regulates utility companies, to launch an investigation into the cause of the incident.

The building apparently was the latest in New York City to be rocked by a gas explosion in the last few years, though officials say the causes have all been different.

In 2014, eight people were killed and 70 injured when two apartment buildings in East Harlem were levelled by a gas explosion. In March, an apparently illegally tapped gas line caused an explosion that killed two people, injured 19 more and destroyed three buildings. And three construction workers were injured in August when someone lit a match while working on a gas line at a high school in the Bronx.

"The only common thread is natural gas and the dangers of natural gas," said James Leonard, the chief of department for the Fire Department of New York.

Associated Press writers Michael Balsamo and Karen Matthews contributed to this report.