Third Precinct Police Station Detroit

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The Third Precinct Police Station, also known as the Hunt Street Station, is a former police station located at 2200 Hunt Street in Detroit, Michigan. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980 and now serves as a co-working space named "Hunt Street Station."

The building is a three-story structure constructed from yellow brick and limestone, featuring a late 19th-century Beaux-Arts design. Its architecture includes projecting and receding planes, a curved entrance bay with flanking limestone columns and carvings of police shields and policeman faces, arched terra-cotta enframements on the second and third floors, and an ornate metal cornice fabricated by the Detroit Cornice and Slate Company.

Designed by architect Edward Van Leyen, who also designed the Belle Isle Casino, the station was completed in May 1897. It served as the Detroit Metropolitan Police Department's Third Precinct for 63 years until 1959 when it was sold after consolidation with the Seventh Precinct. The building later functioned as an office space but stood empty by 2004. In early 2017, it was purchased and underwent historical renovation, reopening in 2018 as a co-working space.

Significantly, the station housed the nation's first police training academy, established in 1911, and is notable for its role in Detroit's law enforcement history.