| By Mark Wineka
Salisbury Post
The handwritten message on the wall of
the captain's office says a lot:
Welcome to Station 4
35 years in the making
It's punctuated at the end with a smiley
face.
The Salisbury Fire Department has waited
a long time for a new
fire station and, without
fanfare, firefighters manned their first
shift in Station 4 at 2325 Statesville Blvd.
Friday night.
The city last built a
fire station in 1980 --
Station 2 on South Main Street.
But that station, needing to be closer to
National Starch and Chemical Corp. on Cedar
Springs Road, only replaced a former station
next to Chestnut Hill Cemetery.
Salisbury hasn't really added a
fire station
since 1957, when Station 3 on West Innes
Street was built.
So the message board in the captain's
office would have been just as accurate to
say 50 years in the making.
"It's the first fire
station in 50 years, but I'm
looking forward to it," said Rodney
Misenheimer, who will be one of the three
captains at Station 4. "It's a great
improvement for us and the city."
The $1.4 million station required the
addition of six more firefighters.
Fire Chief Bob Parnell says the location
will essentially cut response times in half
for a western part of the city that includes
the Salisbury Mall, many apartment complexes
and significant housing developments.
Response times to this part of the city
from Station 3 had been 6 to 9 minutes. It
will be 3 to 5 minutes with the new station,
Parnell says.
The Fire Department hired and started
training the six new firefighters in April.
They went on line in August and have been
working out of Station 2 until the new digs
were ready.
Station 4 becomes the city's second
largest station behind the headquarters
station on East Innes Street which, as with
the new station, has four bays.
KKA Architecture designed the new
station. Summit Developers served as general
contractor.
Staff Capt. Paul Rendleman, logistics
officer for the Fire Department, nursed the
whole project along from the official
groundbreaking in October 2005.
Rendleman made countless trips to the
construction site all during 2006.
"We kind of call it the house that Paul
built," Parnell says.
The building is no-frills -- a metal
framework with brick veneer in front. It's
built for efficiency of movement for both
responding to a fire call and returning from
one.
Don't expect to find a fire pole, but it
is the first Salisbury
fire station that includes
separate facilities for men and women
firefighters.
The station provides four sleeping pods,
a day area, kitchen, captain's office, foyer
and expansive upstairs for exercise
equipment and training.
The deep lot off Statesville Boulevard
has extensive concrete driveways in the
front, side and rear, allowing all the
equipment to circle around and pull into
bays from the back.
The undeveloped portion of the 3-acre
tract offers potential for training
activities or exercise areas, Rendleman
says.
"We put our money into space," Parnell
adds.
In the beginning, the four-bay area will
include the multi-functional "Quint"
apparatus, a reserve engine and the
hazardous materials truck and trailer, which
just fits into the building.
The Haz-Mat rig was being parked outside
at Station 2.
Parnell says the department continues to
assess what other equipment will be located
at Station 4.
By design, the decontamination area is
between the expansive bay area and the
living quarters. It includes an emergency
shower area, sinks for cleaning equipment
and a special washing machine or "extractor"
for decontaminating turnout gear.
"Decontamination is a big issue with OSHA"
and workplace safety laws in general,
Parnell says. The area features a lot of
stainless steel and non-porous concrete. It
also has a dryer for hoses and turnout gear.
A door from the decontamination area
leads to the regular shower and toilet
facilities and sleeping pods.
Each pod includes a raised bed with
drawers underneath. Firefighters are
provided locker space, closets, desks with
computer hookups and cable television. The
pods are open at one end so firefighters can
quickly move out the door to the bays.
Walls separate the pods for privacy yet
allow the firefighters to communicate with
each other.
The department has equipped the day area
with five recliners, a television for
training videos and DVDS, and storage
cabinets for personal food supplies.
The kitchen area has all the usual
appliances and large dining table. The
captain's office has a door directly to the
bay area.
The captains at Station 4 will include
Misenheimer, Bobby Fox and Mike Spry.
Firefighters moved or put together
themselves a lot of their new furnishings.
"I thought moving into my house was
hard," Misenheimer says.
A dozen firefighters will be assigned to
Station 4, with four men or women designated
for each 24-hour shift.
The station has an emergency call box
just outside its front door. If the
station's crew were out on a call and a
passerby needed emergency help, he could
speak directly with a 911 dispatcher through
the box.
The station has a full sprinkler system,
heat and smoke detectors and an alarm
system. The 14-foot-high bay doors -- four
in front and four in back -- have motion
detectors.
The road construction connected to the
widening of Statesville Boulevard continues
in front of Station 4. Parnell said the
state Department of Transportation will be
putting a break in the future median so fire
trucks can turn left from the station.
Parnell expects the station also will
have a traffic light after the DOT performs
necessary traffic studies.
While Station 4 is officially up and
running Monday, the city won't have an
official ribbon-cutting and open house until
April 14.
Parnell says the station's foyer will be
outfitted with a hollowed-out fire hydrant,
which will include a time capsule to be
opened in, say, 50 years. The Salisbury Fire
Department knows exactly how long that is.
Contact Mark Wineka at 704-797-4263, or
mwineka@salisburypost.com. |