Lebanon demolishes Central Fire Station to make way for new building

Cliff Cantlin, left, who retired from the Lebanon Fire Department in 2007, talks to Inspector Charlie Barker, who stated working in the department a few months later, as they watch the demolition of the Central Fire Station in Lebanon, N.H., on Thursday, Sept. 5, 2024. A new fire station will be built in its place and is expected to be completed and ready for operation by January 2026. “It was home for 28 years,” Cantlin said. (Valley News - Alex Driehaus) Copyright Valley News. May not be reprinted or used online without permission. Send requests to permission@vnews.com.

Cliff Cantlin, left, who retired from the Lebanon Fire Department in 2007, talks to Inspector Charlie Barker, who stated working in the department a few months later, as they watch the demolition of the Central Fire Station in Lebanon, N.H., on Thursday, Sept. 5, 2024. A new fire station will be built in its place and is expected to be completed and ready for operation by January 2026. “It was home for 28 years,” Cantlin said. (Valley News - Alex Driehaus) Copyright Valley News. May not be reprinted or used online without permission. Send requests to permission@vnews.com. Valley News — Alex Driehaus

Published: 09-12-2024 4:41 PM

Modified: 09-12-2024 6:01 PM


Cliff Cantlin, left, who retired from the Lebanon Fire Department in 2007, talks to Inspector Charlie Barker, who stated working in the department a few months later, as they watch the demolition of the Central Fire Station in Lebanon on Sept. 5.

A new fire station will be built in its place and is expected to be completed and ready for operation by January 2026.

“It was home for 28 years,” Cantlin said.

Yesterday's Most Read Articles

A Life: ‘They all remembered Becky’
Dog dies when car rolls into Lake Fairlee
Dump truck driver faces charges in death of pedestrian in Newport
Woodstock trustees’ report says former police chief failed to serve as town ‘role model’
Black and Hispanic drivers stopped disproportionately across Vermont, traffic stops study finds
Incident that led to school lockdown in Haverhill was hoax, officials say