[1][2] Details of the building's plans were released in September 1908, drawn by department architect A. C.
[2] The building was completed in 1908, built as the last in the city to accommodate horse-drawn engines (the transition to motorized equipment began one year later).
The city began leasing the station to the Central Ohio Fire Museum, which facilitated a restoration of the building's exterior in 1990.
The facade's third story and decorative parapet were rebuilt, along with the top of its hose tower.
This article about a property in Franklin County, Ohio on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.