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Brick fire station at dusk with illuminated Fire House No. 8 sign and fire engines parked in open bays.

City of Roseville Fire Station #8

City of Roseville

Fire Station #8 represents Lionakis' fifth consecutive new station for the City of Roseville, a relationship that began with Fire Station #6 in 2001 and has since spanned multiple fire chiefs, city project managers, battalion chiefs, and the line firefighters participating in design committees. That continuity shapes how the work gets done as each station builds on the last in process familiarity, in institutional knowledge, and in the kind of candid collaboration that only develops over time.

The fire station is designed for the full complexity of how firefighters actually live and work: three drive-through apparatus bays, a source-capture exhaust system, Battalion Chief quarters, individual sleeping rooms, a kitchen-dining-day room, a private garden patio, fitness space, shop, administrative offices, secure staff parking, and a freestanding communications tower. New strategies for limiting the spread of contaminants within the station reflect the department's commitment to protecting the long-term health of its crew and were designed in alignment with National Fire Protection Association guidelines.

Brick fire station at dusk with illuminated Fire House No. 8 sign and fire engines parked in open bays.
Modern fire station lounge with a long conference table, kitchen island, recliners, and Roseville Fire signage on the wall.
Interior of a modern fire station bay with Roseville Fire Department ladder truck and engine parked inside.
Roseville Fire Department engine and rescue vehicles parked inside a bright fire station bay marked Engine Roseville
Brick fire station with a fire engine parked outside, marked Fire House No. 8 and City of Roseville Fire Department.