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Palm Bay Cuts the Ribbon on Fire Station 7, Ending Years of Delayed Response Times in the Northeast

A $7.4 million facility replaces a station demolished in 2022, restoring coverage to one of the city’s most underserved areas and setting the blueprint for future fire stations citywide.

Palm Bay, FL -- The City of Palm Bay will hold a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the new Fire Station 7 on April 14 at 10:00 AM at 2144 Palm Bay Road. Residents and media are welcome to attend.

The opening marks the end of a multi-year public safety gap in the city’s northeast quadrant. That corner of Palm Bay had been without a dedicated fire station since the former Fire Station 1 was demolished in January 2022 and the site sat empty. During the construction period, response times in the area were longer than the national five-minute standard, leaving what Fire Rescue officials described as “red zones” on the city’s response maps.

Station 7 closes those gaps. With the new facility operational, Fire Rescue expects to bring response times in the northeast corridor down to approximately five minutes, in line with the national benchmark.

Years in the Making

The old Fire Station 1 was torn down using federal money. Demolition funding came from a FY 2020-2021 Community Development Block Grant, with the former site qualifying under U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development regulations as a public facility improvement serving a low- and moderate-income area.

The city spent the intervening years designing and funding the replacement. CPZ Architects designed the new station. The city approved a $150,000 task order for construction administration separately. The construction contract (IFB 30-0-2024) went to W & J Construction Corp. of Rockledge during the August 1, 2024, Regular Council Meeting, with a total estimated construction cost of $7,472,460.

Funding came from multiple sources: a CDBG-MIT application for $4 million with a $358,318 city match, a $1 million Local Support Grant request from the Florida House, and approximately $4 million from the General Fund Undesignated Fund Balance. Transportation and public safety impact fees from new developments in the area also contributed.

A Station Built to Scale

Station 7 is not just a replacement. The city is using it as the prototype for all future Palm Bay fire stations. Future facilities, including the planned Station 8, will replicate this design with minor modifications. One planned addition for future stations: a co-located police substation built into the floor plan.

The facility is equipped to handle a full complement of apparatus and personnel. Fire Rescue will staff the station with a ladder truck (four personnel), a squad/quick response vehicle (two personnel), and a brush truck. The city purchased a Pierce 75-foot Quint fire apparatus from Ten-8 Fire & Safety for $1,111,000, funded by reallocating demolition savings.

A Brevard County ALS transport unit will also co-locate at Station 7. That arrangement keeps county paramedics positioned in the northeast without duplicating tax-funded services for residents who otherwise pay twice.

Palm Bay began hiring for Station 7 positions back in FY 2022, carrying those personnel through training rotations to maintain capacity during construction. That decision means the station opens with a trained crew in place, not a hiring cycle still underway.

What to Expect at the Ceremony

The April 14 event begins at 10:00 AM at 2144 Palm Bay Road. After the ribbon-cutting, Fire Rescue will open the station for public tours. Attendees can meet firefighters, command staff, and community leaders. Halo, the department’s therapy K9, will also be on hand.

City officials, Palm Bay Fire Rescue personnel, and community members are expected to attend.

The public is encouraged to come. This is the first new fire station in Palm Bay in years, and the facility it replaces had been sitting as a vacant lot for nearly three years before ground broke. For residents in the northeast part of the city who have spent that time watching longer-than-average response times persist, April 14 is worth showing up for.


Sources

  • City of Palm Bay press release, March 30, 2026 (Christina Born, PIO)

  • Palm Bay City Council Regular Council Meeting minutes, August 1, 2024 (IFB 30-0-2024)

  • Palm Bay Fire Rescue operational context (NLM research, 2025-2026)

  • HUD Community Development Block Grant program regulations

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