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downtown and the hospitals." <br /> The new station at the southeast corner of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Drive and <br /> Lincolnway West provides a more central location within the district, reflecting strategic <br /> planning by the city and the fire department for optimum response times for all <br /> emergencies, already under 5 minutes. <br /> "It's a great fit in the community," said Fire Chief Howard Buchanon, who managed the <br /> construction project before becoming chief in April. "We had outgrown Station No. 2 for <br /> some time." <br /> The new 17,000-square-foot station more than doubles the square footage of the existing <br /> station, which had about 7,000 square feet. As the second largest station in the city and <br /> the only one with three bays (other than Central), Fire Station No. 2 receives 100 to 200 <br /> calls monthly, vying with Central for the most calls. The new station also is the only <br /> facility besides Central to have its own air compressor to refill air canisters. <br /> Fire Station No. 2 houses Medic Unit No. 3, Battalion Chief No. 103, Engine No. 2, Boat <br /> No. 2 with tow vehicle, and a reserve rescue ambulance. Twenty-one firefighters (seven <br /> per shift) are stationed there. A staff office enables the battalion chief to deploy personnel <br /> from Station No. 2, rather than traveling to the Central Station for that work. "This is <br /> more convenient," Buchanon said. <br /> Buchanon thanked Mayor Luecke; Public Works Director Gary Gilot, City Engineer Carl <br /> Littrell and Public Construction Manager Toy Villa, Memorial Hospital; South Bend <br /> Heritage Foundation and the Lincolnway West Commercial Corridor steering committee <br /> for their assistance with the project. <br /> In addition to $1.2 million in funding, Memorial, the city's largest employer, also paid in <br /> 2001 for an architect to update the Fire Department's master plan for the best location for <br /> Station 2. The plan previously had been updated in 1996. <br /> South Bend Heritage Foundation and the Lincolnway West committee worked on site <br /> development for the new station, including acquisition, demolition and environmental <br /> remediation. They also provided funding for a third bay for the unit, Buchanon said, <br /> which enables each company to respond from its own bay and the rescue boat to be <br /> connected and ready for response at all times. The project began in January 2006 with <br /> Wakarusa-based Brown& Brown General Contractors serving as general contractor <br /> based on a design by MPA Architects of South Bend. <br /> The change in station locations also eliminated a daily detour faced by the existing <br /> Station No. 2. Firefighters previously had to drive west on Marion to Michigan Street and <br /> then travel back east on LaSalle to respond to any calls east of the St. Joseph River. <br /> Since becoming a professional fire department in 1887, the South Bend Fire Department <br /> has grown to 248 sworn firefighters. During Luecke's tenure as mayor, Fire Station No. 2 <br /> represents the third new fire station constructed, including the Central Fire Station, 1222 <br /> S. Michigan St., and Fire Station No. 10, 5303 York Road. <br /> - 30 - <br />