ADG Completes Programming and Master Plan of City of Fort Myers Fire Station No.1 and Administration Facility

ADG has completed programming and master planning services for the City of Ft. Myers three-story fire station and administration facility. The new 30,000 SF facility will meet current and future (2025) needs, and is to include a fully staffed Fire Station No. 1 and central operations for Fire Administration and Fire Prevention. The new facility will greatly enhance the City’s public safety and emergency disaster preparedness.

The consolidation of Fire Administration and Fire Prevention services with Fire Station No. 1 will achieve economies in construction and enhance the efficiency of operations and personnel.  Fire Station No. 1 will effectively serve as the central fire station for the department, providing training, equipment maintenance functions, and material storage.

The new facility will provide a multi-purpose classroom on the first floor which can accommodate personnel from the entire department as well as smaller break out meetings and training sessions.  This location also serves to provide a flexible and secure community meeting space.

The station is proposed as a five-bay drive-through arrangement, housing apparatus to serve Station No.1 and the storage of reserve apparatus. As a critical facility, the construction systems will be designed to survive a Category 5 hurricane, and will be equipped with an emergency generator and on-site fuel storage located above flood elevation.  Gas and diesel fueling for apparatus is also provided.

ADG is committed to sustainable architecture and the project will seek LEED Silver certification from the USGBC. The master site plan development considers the preservation of existing open space and mature vegetation, on-site stormwater retention, and the redevelopment of an existing parking area and building pad location for the requirements of the new facility, to minimize further impacts beyond the existing impervious footprint.

The facility will be provided with water conserving and metered fixtures, and automated building systems controls for lighting and HVAC. Energy efficient construction is to include thermally efficient glazing assemblies and envelope design, solar shading, and the installation of a “cool” roof. Flexibility to accommodate the future provision of integrated photovoltaic systems and other on-site renewable energy systems is a further design consideration.

Public Safety Facilities – Providing for New and Updated Facilities

The operational needs of public safety entities, including law enforcement, fire & emergency medical services, emergency management and emergency communications, require secure, survivable, technologically advanced facilities from which staff can operate.  Operations must be continuous, both in typical times and in times of emergency situations.  The structures that these operations are housed in require what is known as a “survivable” building envelope, which can withstand both natural and man-made catastrophic events.

The exterior roof and wall components of the building, including windows, doors, canopies, roof membrane, lighting, air intake and exhaust vents, etc. must all be able to withstand external forces, such as high winds and impacts associated with storms and explosive blasts.  These structures also need to be located on sites which allow for both secure and non-secure points of access, as well as provide for limited secure buffer zones (known as “stand-off distance” zones).

In addition, there are specialized spaces associated with these operations that require specialized systems, such as security, communications, audio/visual, specialized fire protection, HVAC, and electrical systems, as well as redundant back-up capacity for all of these components to function when primary sources of power, data, heating and cooling are not functioning.  These systems must conform to current code requirements.

When cities, counties, state and federal entities consider their on-going need to update their public safety facilities, they must consider the cost impact of the above requirements. While it is possible to update existing facilities to incorporate these systems and strengthen the exterior building envelope, it is, in most cases, more cost effective to provide for a new facility which incorporates current and, if possible, future systems and space capacity for on-going operations.

New building material technologies, especially for glazing, roofing and coatings are being developed for stronger and more durable building performance.  Technologies continue to evolve for communications & data systems.  Audio/visual systems used for training of personnel have also changed in recent years.  These same systems now allow for a much broader means of connectivity among the public safety / emergency management community and the community at large. All of these improved materials and systems are more easily incorporated into new facilities which allow adequate space and adjacencies for maximizing performance.