7 beautiful US border control stations built under the last three presidential administrations

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Canadian Plaza at the Peace Bridge open buildings

NORR Limited/Open Buildings

The Canadian Plaza at the Peace Bridge designed by NORR Limited in Fort Eerie.

For much of the early 20th century, the architecture of border control stations - where US customs agents process people traveling in and out of the country - mirrored America's strict stance on immigration. The buildings, like the concrete-and-steel Nogales Port of Entry on Arizona's border, were designed to look bare-bones, sterile, and uninviting.

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But there is a growing movement in the architecture community to design border control stations that look more welcoming (despite President-elect Donald Trump pleas to build a 55-foot-high wall).

For the past two decades, the General Services Administration (GSA) has run a program called "Design Excellence," which aims to raise the standard for public architecture, including patrol stations at the two borders. As Citylab's Amanda Hurley noted, the shift largely started under Bill Clinton's administration.

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