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Working with Section 106 ACHP
Case Digest Summer
2004 District of Columbia: Transfer
of the Southeast Federal Center
District of Columbia: Transfer of the Southeast Federal Center
Agency: General Services
Administration
The Southeast
Federal Center in Washington, DC, once played a key role in the
Nation’s defense during World War I and World War II. An annex to
the Washington Navy Yard, the center was the site where ordnance
was produced and naval ships repaired.
As part of a
plan to transform the commercial area along the city’s Anacostia
River into vibrant neighborhoods and public parks, the U.S. General
Services Administration intends to sell or lease most of the Southeast
Federal Center to private developers for mixed-use development.
The agency is
currently attempting to determine the long-term effects of the planned
development on the center’s historic properties.
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The U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) plans to transfer approximately
42 acres of Washington, DCs Southeast Federal Center by selling
them and/or leasing them to a private developer for mixed-use development.
Southeast Federal Center, Washington, DC
(photo courtesy of GSA)
The center is in the National Register-eligible Washington Navy Yard
Annex Historic District. The transfer project will affect six contributing
structures within the historic district as well as the contextual industrial
naval history of the site.
In addition, the site is adjacent to the Washington Navy Yard, which
is a National Historic Landmark, and the D.C. Water and Sewer Authority
Main Pumping Station of 1908, which is eligible for the National Register.
GSA has also identified four National Register-eligible archeological
resources at the site, eight areas of archeological potential, and four
other properties that must be further evaluated.
The Southeast Federal Center is located in the commercial area along
the Anacostia River that city planners hope to transform into neighborhoods
and public parks.
The center is also a vital component of the Southeast Federal Center
Public-Private Development Act of 2000, and supports the vision outlined
in the National Capital Planning Commissions report, Extending the
Legacy Plan: Planning Americas Capital in the 21st Century.
GSA is currently developing a Programmatic Agreement with the projects
11 consulting parties and signatories, including the ACHP; U.S. Navy;
National Capital Planning Commission; National Trust for Historic Preservation;
District of Columbia State Historic Preservation Office (D.C. SHPO); D.C.
Office of Planning; Capital Hill Restoration Society; and the developers.
The agreement will ensure that the sites development is compatible
with the Southeast Federal Centers historic nature and complies
with the Secretary of the Interior Standards for Archeology and Historic
Preservation. Historic covenants are also being created to establish the
rights and obligations of the agreements signatories if the land
is transferred by ground lease or sale.
The ACHP and the DC SHPO have revised the draft agreement, and a meeting
will be held with the projects consulting parties in mid-July 2004
to discuss the draft. GSA has not yet fully determined the long-term effects
of the planned development activities, which the developers will carry
out parcel by parcel or in phases.
Staff contact: Hector
Abreu Cintron
Posted
August 9, 2004
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