Public Safety Projects:
Tucson Police Department Forensic Crime Laboratory Nogales Police Department Needs AssessmentState of Wisconsin Dept of Justice Crime Lab programming & feasibility study
Westside Police Service Center Glendale Police Department Needs Assessment Santa Cruz Police SubstationCity of Hartford, Wisconsin Police Department Feasibility City
Fire Central Headquarters and Fire Station No. 1 Mountain Vista Headquarters & Fire Station #610 Northwest Fire District Fire Station #33 City of Tucson Evidence, Property and Identification Center 911 Dispatch Center Expansion Pima County Fleet Services Green Valley Fire District Station #151 Northwest Fire District Station #39 Green Valley Fire District Station #155 Tucson Fire Department Station #22 Tucson Fire Maintenance Tucson Fire Department Stations #20 & #21 Three Points Fire Station #91 Mountain Vista Fire Station #620 Northwest Fire Station #30 Northwest Fire Station #32Green Valley Fire District Station #155
Client: Green Valley Fire DistrictContractor: Lang Wyatt Construction
Location: Green Valley, Arizona
Size: 13,000 SF
Notable Design Award - Career Category - Fire Chief's Station Style Design Competition.
WSM Architects worked with the Fire District to develop a standardized program and conceptual space plan that will be applicable to stations of all sizes. We then applied this standard to Station 155, a three-bay station. Each station is subject to significantly different local aesthetics, but the standardized program allows the flexibility necessary to design a solution that is right for the site and the surrounding neighborhood. WSM also helped the Fire District conduct a neighborhood meeting to solicit input on the proposed color scheme and to explain the construction process and the operation of the Fire Station. Both fire stations achieved LEED Silver Certification (exceeding the original LEED goals within the budget), reflecting a commitment to the community and the environment.
WSM Architects worked with the Fire District to develop a standardized program and conceptual space plan that will be applicable to stations of all sizes. We then applied this standard to Station 155, a three-bay station. Each station is subject to significantly different local aesthetics, but the standardized program allows the flexibility necessary to design a solution that is right for the site and the surrounding neighborhood. WSM also helped the Fire District conduct a neighborhood meeting to solicit input on the proposed color scheme and to explain the construction process and the operation of the Fire Station. Both fire stations achieved LEED Silver Certification (exceeding the original LEED goals within the budget), reflecting a commitment to the community and the environment.