Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Finally, new fire station breaks ground

- By Brian Ballou Staff writer

When it’s completed in about a year, Fire Station 54 in Fort Lauderdale will be energy-efficient and able to withstand a category 5 hurricane, officials say.

And it should last for 50 years, just like the old one did.

Speaking of years, it took 12 for this one to arrive at Saturday’s groundbrea­king stage.

In 2004, a $40 million referendum was passed to fund Station 54, just off Oakland Park Boulevard near the Intracoast­al waterway, and nine other aged and decaying stations. But only three stations were built because of snags in land-swap deals.

The $3.8 million station had to be significan­tly redesigned as new building code requiremen­ts took effect in 2014, after the drawings were done.

The groundbrea­king went off with one minor snag — rain. But as a crowd of about 50 people huddled under a tent, Mayor Jack Seiler thanked city staff for their help in getting the project moving.

Seiler also said the station is critical to serving a growing population.

“The No. 1 thing we do in government is public safety,” Seiler said, during the groundbrea­king ceremony for the twostory, 10,000-square-foot building.

The Fort Lauderdale Fire Department is one of the busiest in the state. It responded to more than 53,000 calls last year.

The station is in a strategic location, officials say, in the center of a community with one of the highest number of senior citizens, retirees and seasonal residents.

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