
Tuesday, May 27, is the ribbon cutting for the new City Hall and Steamboat Springs Fire Rescue Station 1 and Civic Plaza. It is at 4:30 p.m. at the facility which is between Lincoln and Oak at 10th Street. The Veterans will have a flag ceremony, there will be a ribbon cutting, light refreshments, music, and tours of the facility. Everyone is invited.
Press Release from the City of Steamboat Springs; May 7, 2025.
City Hall & Fire Station Ready To Officially Cut Ribbon
Celebratory Function Set for Tuesday Evening, May 27
STEAMBOAT SPRINGS, COLORADO-May 7, 2025-The ribbons will be cut, the flags raised, and the community can celebrate the new City Hall, downtown Steamboat Springs Fire Rescue Station 1 and Civic Plaza on Tuesday evening, May 27, 2025.
“We are excited to showcase these great new community assets and thanks all those who participated and contributed to making this vision into a reality,” commented City Manager Tom Leeson. “The new civic campus really is for the community and hopefully folks come down and celebrate with us.”
Join the City of Steamboat Springs, Steamboat Springs Fire Rescue and the Steamboat Springs Fire Protection District officially welcome the new facilities to the community from 4:30pm to 6:30pm. The evening will feature welcome and comments, Veterans Center flag ceremony, ribbon butting and light refreshments, music and tours of the facilities.
The new City Hall, encompassing over 15,000-sq-ft, is positioned at the corner of 10th and Lincoln Avenue. The three-story building features the latest in energy efficiencies and sustainability as well as new public amenities. The downtown facility anchors local government as a hub of the municipality and transforms the two-block area into a civic campus and public plaza.
Steamboat Springs Fire Rescue Station 1 is an 18,000+-sq-ft, two-level facility featuring drive through access from large bays providing flexibility of apparatus placement and response capabilities. A mezzanine training and storage area, along with a hose dry tower connects to the apparatus bay. On-site living quarters house crews during six-month rotations.
The downtown site creates a civic plaza between the facilities where the community can enjoy the outdoors, gather, and reflect on public art. In addition to municipal functions, the plaza would accommodate public gatherings and other programmed uses.
Davis Partnership served as architect of record and Wember was the city’s owner’s representative for the project. FCI Constructors, Inc., a Colorado company with more than 40 years of experience, was the general contractor. A $750,000 Colorado Department of Local Affairs (DOLA) grant was awarded to the project