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  • Per diem lookup
Buy through us
Explore buy through us
Category management
Government property for sale or lease
Personal property (tangible goods)
Real property (real estate and buildings) for public use
Real property sales
Vehicle sales
Products and services
Facilities and construction
Human capital
Industrial products and services
Information technology
Office management
Professional services
Security and protection
Transportation and logistics services
Travel and lodging
Purchasing programs
Multiple award schedule
SmartPay (charge card services)
Assisted acquisition
Commercial platforms
Emergency acquisition basic ordering agreements
Federal strategic sourcing initiative
Fleet management
HCaTS and HCaTS SB
OASIS and OASIS SB
Requisition programs
State and local programs
Technology programs
8(a) set asides on GSA contracts
Shared services
Charge cards and payments (SmartPay)
Disposal of excess property
Fleet management
Interagency invoicing (G-Invoicing)
Payroll services
Quality service management offices
Support services for CABs
Website and digital services
Sell to government
Explore sell to government
Step 1: Learn about government contracting
Ways you can sell to government
How to access contract opportunities
Conduct market research
Step 2: Compete for a contract
Register your business
Certify as a small business
Become a schedule holder
Market your business
Research active solicitations
Respond to a solicitation
What to expect during the award process
Step 3: Manage your contract
Comply with contractual requirements
Handle contract modifications
Monitor past performance evaluations
Real estate
Explore real estate
Design and construction
3D-4D building information modeling
Art in architecture | Fine arts
Computer-aided design standards
Commissioning
Design excellence
Engineering
Project management information system
Spatial data management
Prospectus thresholds
Facilities management
Facilities operations
Security
Smart buildings
Tenant services
Utility services
Water quality management
Historic preservation
Explore historic buildings
Heritage tourism
Historic preservation policy, tools and resources
Historic building stewardship
Videos, pictures, posters and more
NEPA implementation
Our properties
Courthouse program
Land ports of entry
Lighthouses
Owned and leased properties
Prospectus library
Regional buildings
Renting property
Visiting public buildings
Real estate services
Leasing
Real property disposal
Reimbursable services (RWA)
Rental policy and procedures
Site selection and relocation
For businesses seeking opportunities
For federal customers
For workers in federal buildings
Voice of the customer
Workplace
Commercial coworking
Federal coworking
Policy and regulations
Explore policy and regulations
Policy
Acquisition management policy
Aviation management policy
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Regulations
Federal acquisition regulations
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GSA acquisition manual
Managing the federal rulemaking process
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Professional IT services
Software products and services
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Work with small businesses
Purchasing programs
Governmentwide acquisition contracts
IT category
MAS information technology
Software purchase agreements
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USAccess
Government initiatives
18F
Cybersecurity
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Federal identity, credentials, and access management
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Technology modernization fund
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Training
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GSA does that podcast
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Region 1 | New England
Region 2 | Northeast and Caribbean
Region 3 | Mid-Atlantic
Region 4 | Southeast Sunbelt
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  6. U.S. General Services Administration Building, Washington, DC

U.S. General Services Administration Building, Washington, DC

Location: 1800 F St NW, Washington, DC 20006

History

GSA Building, Washington DC

The U.S. General Services Administration Building, originally designed for the U.S. Department of the Interior, was the first truly modern office building constructed by the U.S. Government and served as a model for federal offices through the early 1930s.

New York architect Charles Butler (1871-1953) designed the innovative building in his capacity as consultant to the U.S. Treasury Department’s Supervising Architect Oscar Wenderoth (1873-1938). Butler’s design, patterned after private office buildings in New York and Washington, DC, allowed for the substantial amount of natural light necessary for the many architects, draftsmen, pressmen, and scientists working in the building. Construction of the restrained Neo-Classical building began in 1915 and was completed in 1917 at a cost of $2,703,494.

The U.S. Department of the Interior occupied the building from 1917 until 1937, a period significant in the department’s history. The activities of the National Park Service were conceived in the sixth floor offices of Interior Secretary Franklin K. Lane. The U.S. Geological Survey, the largest tenant in the building, determined which public lands would be closed to development and conserved for their mineral and water resources. In 1921-1922 the building was the locus of the “Teapot Dome” scandal involving Secretary of the Interior Albert Fall. Fall was convicted and imprisoned for accepting $400,000 in bribes from oil magnates Harry F. Sinclair and Edward L. Doheny in return for secretly granting them rights to drill for oil on Federal lands. Harold Ickes, Secretary of the Interior under Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry Truman, oversaw construction of dams, fully developed the National Park Service to provide recreational needs, and served as the first Federal Administrator of Public Works.

In 1939 the Federal Works Administration (FWA) became the building’s primary occupant. FWA activities were subsumed into the newly created U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) in 1949 and the building was renamed the U.S. General Services Administration Building. In 1986 the building was listed in the National Register of Historic Places. It continues to house GSA including the Public Buildings Service—the largest and most diversified real estate organization in the world.

Architecture

The U.S. General Services Administration Building, the first government building designed for the specific needs of a designated federal department, was the first federal building to use limestone facing and one of the first buildings in Washington, DC constructed of steel framing. It fills the entire city block between E, F, Eighteenth and Nineteenth Streets.

The site was thought by some Congressional representatives to be a poor location for a major federal building due to its distance from Capitol Hill. One Congressman stated in 1913, “Every time we build one of these buildings, we get them farther and farther out, after a while they will go to the city limits…it is not a good business policy to scatter these buildings everywhere.

The building was designed in an “E-shaped” configuration, creating open courtyards that provided maximum exposure to natural light and cooling breezes for all offices. This design resulted in glass covering fifty percent of the total wall surface on the street elevations and seventy percent of the total wall surface on the courtyard elevations. The facade was originally to have been built of brick, but substantial cost-savings measures undertaken during construction permitted the use of Indiana limestone for all of the building’s exterior.

A large building, its exterior is presented without undue ornamentation. The major exterior decorative element is the centrally located F Street entrance. Pilasters and a modillion cornice frame each of the three entry doors on the F Street facade. An eagle carved by Ernest C. Bairstow, a decorative sculptor from Washington, DC, is located over the central opening. Bairstow also provided the designs for the twenty-eight limestone panels in the frieze at the sixth story and the ornamental work on the F Street entrances. The entrance at the southern end of Eighteenth Street is sheltered by an iron and glass marquee overhanging the granite steps and part of a semi-circular driveway. This unusual entrance treatment was designed originally as a private entrance for the Secretary of the Interior, whose suite of offices was directly above on the sixth floor.

This suite on the sixth floor, now used by the GSA Administrator, is the most elaborate space in the building. It includes a private office, a private passage, and a private restroom complete with full bath, as well as a public reception room. Distinguished decorative features in the Administrator’s Suite include English oak floor-to-ceiling panels and a relief plaster ceiling. The fireplace of carved French limestone is one of the few working fireplaces remaining in a Federal building in the United States. Beyond this suite, other interior amenities included iced drinking water in the halls, washbasins in each office, and an auditorium, the first such space in a Federal building.

A series of improvements have been made to office spaces to meet the evolving needs of the U.S. Department of Interior, Federal Works Administration, and U.S. General Services Administration. In the 1930s a seventh-floor addition was constructed on the roof and air-conditioning was installed throughout the building. Where necessary, extensive remodeling of original corridors was undertaken.

In 1999 the U.S. General Services Administration initiated a demonstration “First Impressions” project in the lobby and on the building’s exterior. The goal of the “First Impressions” program is to change the way people perceive Federal buildings. Initiatives included restoring windows, cleaning exterior masonry, returning public corridors to original paint colors, replicating original corridor lighting, and creating model office space for the twenty-first century.

Significant Events

  • 1915-1917: A federal building designed by architect Charles Butler is constructed for the U.S. Department of the Interior.
  • 1935: The building undergoes alterations with the construction of a seventh floor and the installation of air-conditioning.
  • 1937-1939: The U.S. Department of the Interior vacates the building and the Federal Works Administration becomes the primary tenant.
  • 1949: The U.S. General Services Administration is established, absorbing the activities and offices of the Federal Works Administration.
  • 1986: The U.S. General Services Administration Building is listed in the National Register of Historic Places.
  • 1999-2002: Restoration, rehabilitation, and pilot modernization projects are undertaken through the newly initiated “First Impressions” Program.

Facts

  • Architect: Charles Butler
  • Architectural Style: Neoclassical
  • Construction Dates: 1915-1917
  • GSA Building Number: DC0021ZZ
  • Landmark Status: Listed in the National Register of Historic Places
  • Primary Materials: Indiana limestone
  • Prominent Features: E-shaped plan allowing for open courtyards; Carved stone eagle and limestone panels designed by Ernest C. Bairstow; Oak-paneled Administrator’s Suite

Poster Download

poster of U.S. General Services Administration Building, Washington, DC

 

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Last updated: Jan 15, 2025
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