The FPGA compilation process (synthesis, map, placement, routing) is a time-consuming process that limits designer productivity. Compilation time can be reduced by using pre-compiled circuit blocks (hard macros). Hard macros consist of previously synthesized, mapped, placed and routed circuitry that can be relatively placed with short tool runtimes and that make it possible to reuse previous computational effort. Two experiments were performed to demonstrate feasibility that hard macros can reduce compilation time. These experiments demonstrated that an augmented Xilinx flow designed specifically to support hard macros can reduce overall compilation time by 3x. Though the process of incorporating hard macros in designs is currently manual and error-prone, it can be automated to create compilation flows with much lower compilation time.