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Architects present preliminary designs for Fire Station 1; council leans toward flat roof and solar‑ready structure

January 02, 2026 | Moline City , Rock Island, Illinois


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Architects present preliminary designs for Fire Station 1; council leans toward flat roof and solar‑ready structure
FGM Architects presented preliminary schematic designs for a proposed Fire Station 1 on city‑owned parcels on 7th Street during a roundtable presentation. Jason Estes of FGM (Speaker 3) described the project as early‑stage and asked for council input on exterior appearance and sustainability tradeoffs.

Estes noted a significant elevation change of about 14 feet across the site and said the design intentionally uses the topography to minimize costly site fill. The concept treats the facility as two stories in section: the main level aligns with 7th Street and a lower level sits down the slope for training spaces and auxiliary vehicle bays. "We want to be there within 90 seconds" of getting occupants to apparatus, Speaker 3 said, describing NFPA‑guided operational goals tied to building layout.

The presentation showed three exterior/roof options: Option 1 (flat roof) with mechanicals and future solar potential; Option 2 (low‑slope metal roofs) offering a more modern profile; and Option 3 (pitched roofs) with greater vertical massing. Design tradeoffs discussed included lifecycle energy costs, maintainability, mechanical serviceability and neighborhood fit—council members repeatedly raised lifecycle costs as a priority over up‑front savings.

Speaker 5 and other participants favored the flat‑roof option for maintenance and solar readiness and debated whether the training tower should be sited on the front for civic presence or the rear for safer, unobstructed training. Speaker 3 said the team aims to finalize exterior elevations and renderings by January, then proceed through full engineering and permitting; he estimated the project would be about six months from being ready to bid once design development and construction documents are complete.

The architects noted sustainability options such as solar panels, geothermal and green roofs, and cautioned that formal LEED certification requires multi‑year data and higher costs; councilmembers discussed prioritizing investments with long‑term payback. Hard copies or handouts of the presentation materials will be provided for further review and comment.

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