• 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

Police Station Architecture Design Tips: Part 1 (Community Connections)

December 18, 2017 Community by Legat Architects

The new face of police stations: strong and welcoming

Not long ago, police stations were built to look like fortresses. Nothing about them said “Come in” or “We’re part of this community.” Rather, the message was, “Stay away.”

A station does need to convey a sense of strength and permanence. Still, the love affair with fortress-like design got to the point where the public avoided the stations. To this day, many stations, with their imposing facades and lack of windows, look more like jails than civic buildings.

Fortunately, there has been a shift in recent years—many police stations have changed their image from cold and intimidating to warm and welcoming. These are true civic buildings that make people feel good about approaching the station.

This post marks the first in a series of considerations for cities and villages thinking about a new police station, or an upgrade to an existing one. The series will draw from Legat Architects’ experience designing the new Arlington Heights Police Station now under construction.

Today’s communities want transparency with their governmental agencies, and the police department is no exception. A friendlier face on a police station changes a community’s perception of the law enforcement professionals within it. Think about the open houses that fire stations host—shouldn’t police stations have that same hospitable feel?

However, it’s not just about appearance. Many stations were built 20 to 40 years ago. Over the years, their communities grew, and their police force and equipment expanded accordingly. But the station, for the most part, stayed the same. Thus, many of today’s stations are undersized and ill-equipped to handle the workforces and technologies within them. And often, there’s no room for expansion.

A new police station under construction in Arlington Heights, Illinois not only offers more space and advanced technologies, but also shows a community-friendly face with its style, materials, arches, and large windows.

A Positive Change in Arlington Heights

Like many stations built in the 1970s, the Arlington Heights Police Station was unattractive and incapable of expansion. It had an imposing, sterile façade with punched window openings—basically a brick box with some small windows.

Additionally, the station desperately needed more space. The department faced a common predicament with renovations: if one area gets expanded, then another area that’s already too small loses more space. The many masonry interior walls made remodeling more of a challenge. Finally, that station’s infrastructure (e.g., HVAC, lighting, data) was decades old and not up to current codes. Too costly to remodel. Impossible to expand. Only one logical solution: build new.

Now under construction, the 70,500-square-foot new station will bring much-needed space, plus its Romanesque style complements adjacent buildings and offers a much more welcoming face to the community.

Ultimately, today’s police stations should be designed as beautiful civic buildings with the same charm and openness as libraries, village halls, or fire stations. It makes a difference for our law enforcement officers, and for those whom they protect.

Next time, we’ll share tips on selecting the best location for a police station.

Contact us to learn more about police station design, 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.