Government

Castle Rock Breaks Ground on Fire Station 156 to Serve Growing Northeast

Castle Rock broke ground on a 15,000-sq-ft fire station near Cobblestone Ranch that will cut emergency response times for the town's fastest-growing neighborhoods by 2027.

Marcus Williams2 min read
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Castle Rock Breaks Ground on Fire Station 156 to Serve Growing Northeast
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Castle Rock Fire and Rescue held a groundbreaking ceremony April 8-9 at the future site of Fire Station 156, marking the start of on-site construction for a facility that town officials say will directly address a coverage gap that has left northeast Castle Rock residents waiting longer than acceptable for emergency response.

The new station will sit near the intersection of Castle Oaks Drive and Pleasant View Drive, placing it squarely within reach of the Cobblestone Ranch and Terrain neighborhoods, two of the fastest-growing residential areas in the town. At 15,000 square feet, Station 156 is designed to handle both fire and medical calls for a service area that has expanded considerably as new homes continue to rise along Castle Rock's northeastern edge. Town officials expect the facility to be operational in 2027, though the construction schedule remains subject to weather, supply chain conditions, and permitting timelines.

The project carries a total estimated cost in the range of $20 to $21 million, financed through certificates of participation approved by the Town Council. That financing mechanism, along with planning approvals and capital project designations, cleared the path for construction to begin this month.

Station 156 will not stand alone. An adjacent logistics center will be built alongside it to handle equipment maintenance, supply staging, and fleet support for Castle Rock Fire and Rescue's broader network of stations. Town officials framed the logistics component as an operational efficiency gain, not just a local convenience, one that will ripple across existing CRFR stations by centralizing functions currently dispersed across the department.

The push for a northeast station has built momentum in municipal agendas for months, with residents near Cobblestone Ranch and Terrain among the most vocal advocates for closer coverage. Response times to parts of that quadrant have exceeded targets, a reality that became harder to ignore as residential density climbed. Town leadership and CRFR have consistently pointed to Station 156 as a direct answer to those gaps.

Construction activity near Castle Oaks Drive and Pleasant View Drive will bring short-term traffic impacts to the area, and the Town has committed to posting project updates and community notices as work progresses. When Station 156 and its logistics center come online, CRFR anticipates faster response windows, improved mutual-aid capacity with neighboring departments, and a more efficient maintenance and fleet operation system built to scale with the town Castle Rock is still becoming.

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