• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Legat Architects Main Logo

Legat Architects

  • About Us
    • Our Story
    • Services
    • Special Projects
    • Team
  • Careers
  • Insights
  • Contact Us
  • Projects
    • Learning
    • Wellness
    • Community

Arlington Heights Police Department building wins Excellence in Masonry award

January 11, 2023 Community, News by Legat Architects

Arlington Heights Police Department building wins Excellence in Masonry award

Masonry Advisory Council names Arlington Heights Police Department building Best Governmental project in Excellence in Masonry architectural design competition; judges comment on facility’s focus on community

Over the past 25 years, the Village of Arlington Heights, Illinois has solidified its downtown image with traditional-looking masonry facilities. Examples include the village hall (built in 2008) and the fire station (built in 2006), both of which feature brick and stone exteriors with traditional architectural massing and detailing.

When the village challenged Legat Architects to design a new police station that would rise between those two, masonry was the obvious choice. Legat set out to create a historically sympathetic design that complemented and enhanced but did not replicate the buildings to its east and west. The resulting 70,500-square-foot Arlington Heights Police Department facility uses large arched openings, lighter brick, and a limestone base to create its own identity, respect the heritage of its neighbors, and welcome the community.

Arlington Heights police station exterior view
The Arlington Heights Police Department building achieves the historical appearance of other municipal, educational, sacred, and commercial landmarks in the village, but it also stands out with a strong brick masonry, stone, and mortar arch and gable aesthetic.
The Arlington Heights Police Department building received the Excellence in Masonry award from the Masonry Advisory Council.

In December 2022, the Masonry Advisory Council honored the station with an Excellence in Masonry Award for Best Governmental project. The competition, which drew nearly 100 entries, applauds the creative and functional use of brick, block, and stone materials for projects in the Chicago and northwest Indiana regions. The eight judges included licensed architectural and engineering professionals, as well as instructors in the International Union of Bricklayers and Allied Craftworkers District Council Training Center.

“It’s unusual to see the robust use of masonry and the way that different materials blend together both expressively and tastefully,” said juror Dan Craig, AIA, senior associate with Shears Adkins Rockmore. “It’s a very inviting space for a larger community, and it exudes the idea that the Arlington Heights Police Department cares about its community and wants to keep it safe. That’s a great message for masonry.”

Jurors Diane Travis (architectural consultant and past technical director of the Rocky Mountain Masonry Institute) and Mark Rodgers (university architect at University of Denver) present the Excellence in Masonry award to Steve Blye (creative director at Legat Architects) and Chief Nick Pecora (Arlington Heights Police Department) at the Museum of Science in Industry in Chicago.

Arlington Heights Police Chief Nick Pecora and Legat’s Steve Blye, both Arlington Heights residents, accepted the award at a ceremony at the Museum of Science and Industry on December 3, 2022.

Watch the video below to learn more:

In 2020, the Arlington Heights Police Station received a national Project of the Year Award from the American Public Works Association.

The architectural and engineering team includes the following: Legat Architects (architect of record), McClaren, Wilson & Lawrie (public safety consultants), Upland Design Group (landscape architects), 20/10 Engineering Group (MEP engineers), Larson Engineering (structural engineers), Mackie Consultants (civil engineers).

Arlington Heights police station arched entry
Designers paid attention to the details, scale, proportion, texture, color, and historic context of the exterior walls, arches, window, and door openings, woven patterned brick trim, and even the control joints. A heavily textured and lighter brick contrasts with the dark red brick at adjacent campus buildings. Additionally, the smooth-faced limestone arches and trim contrast with the heavily rusticated limestone building base.

Richardsonian Romanesque: Looking to the Past to Prepare for the Future

The police station design draws from the Richardsonian Romanesque style popularized by American architect Henry Hobson Richardson in the nineteenth century.

“Rustic textured brick, smooth limestone arched windows and sills, split-face tumbled stone masonry walls, and water-permeable brick pavers were the natural choices,” said Blye. “They relate well to the village aesthetics, were easy to install in various patterned and arched configurations, were available regionally, and fit the construction budget.”

Arlington Heights police station masonry exterior
The station’s textured brick catches sunlight and creates decorative shadows at key building areas.

Brick also promoted cost savings for the village: whereas the sides of the station facing the street use elaborate traditional brick and limestone almost equally, the sides facing less visible train tracks use mostly brick masonry in simpler geometries but retain the brick trim and limestone details from the front.

Arlington Heights police station corridor
The smooth limestone from the exterior continues in the building’s public lobby and conference center.

The use of masonry goes beyond the building. Multicolored patterned brick pavers on the public sidewalks and permeable pavers on the staff parking not only minimize stormwater runoff but also drastically reduce the size and cost of buried tanks required to retain rainwater on a limited site.

To strengthen the building’s sustainability, the village proposed that the project use logs from the ash trees it cut down after an emerald ash borer infestation. A sawyer and several woodworkers used the logs to create structural wood ceiling planks, wood paneling, wood trim, and even the modern wood window mullions seen above.

The stone masonry-clad concrete walls in the planter, designed to repel an intentional vehicular attack on the police station, deflected most of the impact of a vehicle racing over three times the speed limit toward the building—a scenario that is sometimes planned for but rarely tested.

Masonry Passes the Test

Just before the Arlington Heights Police Station opened, its masonry structure was put to the test when an intoxicated driver, traveling at over 100 miles per hour, careened into the anti-terrorism security planter walls. His car tumbled numerous times and slammed into the stone-and brick-clad entry tower.

Although the car punched a hole through the wall, the masonry above remained intact, and the entry lobby and police front desk remained undamaged. The mass of the stone masonry planter walls prevented potential injuries and more serious damage.

“Hand-laid brick and real stone masonry will always endure aesthetically, structurally, and economically,” said Blye.

Contact us with your facility design challenges or comment below to share your thoughts on this post.

Share

In the News

CommunityEmployee Insights

Train station design: regaining the power of rail

tinley park train station legat architects feature
CommunityNews

Hyatt Place and Hyatt House Hotels in East Moline Bring Upscale Lodging to The Bend on the Mighty Mississippi

Hyatt Place Hyatt House East Moline Rendering
News

In Memory: Alan F. Bombick, AIA (1955 – 2016)

Alan F Bombick feature

Looking For More? Check Out The Full Insights.

View All Chevrone right

Get Our Newsletter

Sign up for Legat’s newsletter to uncover design tips, news, and all things architecture.

Footer

Legat Logo Mark
  • About
    • Our Story
    • Services
    • Special Projects
    • Team
  • Careers
  • Insights
  • Projects
    • Learning
    • Wellness
    • Community

Chicago, IL

312 258 9595

Columbus, OH

614 228 7758

Gurnee, IL

847 662 3535

Iowa City, IA

319 450 0510

Oak Brook, IL

630 990 3535

Quad Cities, IA/IL

309 517 5536

Social link iconSocial link iconSocial link iconSocial link iconSocial link iconSocial link icon
  • Branding Assets
  • File Storage
  • Sitemap
  • Privacy Policy

©

2025

Legat Architects. All rights reserved.

Website designed by ArtVersion.