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United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

Report to Congressional Committees: 

November 2011: 

Federal Bureau of Investigation: 

Actions Needed to Document Security Decisions and Address Issues with 
Condition of Headquarters Buildings: 

GAO-12-96: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-12-96, a report to congressional committees. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Since September 11, 2001, the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s (FBI) 
mission and workforce have expanded, and the FBI has outgrown its 
aging headquarters, the J. Edgar Hoover Building (Hoover Building). As 
a result, the FBI also operates in over 40 annexes, the majority 
located in the National Capital Region. In the explanatory statement 
accompanying the 2009 Omnibus Appropriations Act, GAO was directed to 
examine the FBI’s headquarters facilities. In response, GAO examined 
the extent to which (1) these facilities support the FBI’s security, 
space, and building condition requirements and (2) the FBI and the 
General Services Administration (GSA)—-the real property steward for 
the Hoover Building—have followed leading capital decision-making 
practices in identifying alternatives for meeting the FBI’s facility 
needs. GAO reviewed security, space, and condition assessments and 
planning studies; visited FBI facilities; and interviewed FBI and GSA 
officials. 

What GAO Found: 

According to FBI and GSA assessments, the FBI’s headquarters 
facilities-—the Hoover Building and the headquarters annexes—-do not 
fully support the FBI’s long-term security, space, and building 
condition requirements. The FBI has addressed many security concerns 
at the Hoover Building by implementing protective measures. 
Furthermore, in response to a recommendation GAO made in a law 
enforcement sensitive version of this report issued in July 2011, the 
FBI has updated its security assessment of the Hoover Building in 
accordance with security standards issued in 2010. The assessment 
includes recommendations but does not indicate whether recommended 
actions will be implemented. While this is reasonable given the short 
period of time since GAO’s July 2011 report, documentation of 
decisions on the recommendations and tracking implementation is 
important because of facility planning and budget implications—-for 
both the Hoover Building and a new headquarters—-and time needed to 
coordinate with GSA. FBI officials told GAO that the annexes will be 
assessed against the 2010 security standards. The officials noted, 
though, that the dispersion of staff in annexes creates security 
challenges. The Hoover Building’s original design is inefficient, 
according to GSA assessments, making it difficult to reconfigure space 
to promote staff collaboration. Staff dispersion across annexes 
likewise hampers collaboration and the performance of some classified 
work. Furthermore, the condition of the Hoover Building is 
deteriorating, and GSA assessments have identified significant 
recapitalization needs. However, GSA has decided to limit investments 
in the Hoover Building to those necessary to protect health and safety 
and keep building systems functioning while GSA assesses the FBI’s 
facility needs. This decision increases the potential for building 
system failures and disruption to the FBI’s operations. 

Through studies conducted over the past decade, the FBI and GSA have 
considered three broad alternatives, each with variations, to try to 
meet the FBI’s facility needs—-(1) modernize the Hoover Building, (2) 
demolish the Hoover Building and construct a new headquarters on the 
existing site, and (3) acquire a new headquarters on a new site. In 
doing so, the FBI and GSA thus far have generally followed leading 
practices for capital decision making. To varying degrees, these 
alternatives would improve security, space, and building conditions, 
but each would take several years to implement. Estimates of the 
alternatives’ costs, developed in the studies, are not comparable 
because they were prepared at different times and for different 
purposes. The FBI and GSA plan to discuss the FBI’s facility needs 
with the Office of Management and Budget, and GSA and the FBI will 
need to present a business case, including current, comparable cost 
estimates, to support the choice of a preferred alternative and 
financing strategy. The FBI’s 2011 security assessment of the Hoover 
Building, as well as information on any security improvements that may 
be needed at the annexes, could inform the agencies’ decisions and 
help ensure that limited budgetary resources are allocated effectively.
This is a public version of a law enforcement sensitive report that 
GAO issued in July 2011, which has been updated, including a 
modification to a recommendation, to reflect recent FBI actions. 
Information that the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security 
deemed sensitive has been omitted. 

What GAO Recommends: 

The FBI should document decisions about, and track its implementation 
of, all security recommendations for the Hoover Building and the FBI’s 
headquarters annexes. GSA should reassess its decision to limit 
recapitalization investments in the Hoover Building, since the FBI is 
likely to stay in it for several more years while its long-term 
facility needs are being planned. The FBI agreed with these 
recommendations. GSA indicated it is working to implement GAO’s 
recommendation. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-12-96]. For more 
information, contact David C. Maurer at (202) 512-9627 or 
maurerd@gao.gov or David J. Wise at (202) 512-2834 or wised@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

FBI Headquarters Facilities Present Security, Space, and Condition 
Challenges: 

Consistent with Leading Practices Thus Far, the FBI and GSA Have 
Identified Alternatives for Better Meeting the FBI's Facility Needs 
and Are Developing an Approach for Moving Forward: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: 

Appendix II: FBI and GSA Studies Related to FBI Headquarters Planning: 

Appendix III: Financing Strategies Available for Capital Projects: 

Appendix IV: Comments from the Federal Bureau of Investigation: 

Appendix V: Comments from the General Services Administration: 

Appendix VI: Comments from the Department of Homeland Security: 

Appendix VII: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: J. Edgar Hoover Building Facing Pennsylvania Avenue and 10th 
Street: 

Figure 2: Map Showing the J. Edgar Hoover Building and Surrounding 
Streets: 

Figure 3: Design Features That Limit the Hoover Building's Efficiency: 

Figure 4: Conditions GAO Observed at the Hoover Building: 

Figure 5: Timeline of FBI and GSA Studies of FBI Facility Requirements: 

Figure 6: The Baseline Status Quo and Alternative 1 Consider Continued 
Use of the Hoover Building: 

Figure 7: Alternatives 2 and 3 Consider New Construction on the 
Existing Hoover Site or a New Site: 

Abbreviations: 

DHS: Department of Homeland Security: 

FBF: Federal Buildings Fund: 

FBI: Federal Bureau of Investigation: 

FPS: Federal Protective Service: 

FSL: facility security level: 

GSA: General Services Administration: 

ISC: Interagency Security Committee: 

LEED: Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design: 

NCPC: National Capital Planning Commission: 

OMB: Office of Management and Budget: 

SCIF: sensitive compartmented information facility: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

November 8, 2011: 

The Honorable Barbara A. Mikulski: 
Chairwoman: 
The Honorable Kay Bailey Hutchison: 
Ranking Member: 
Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies: 
Committee on Appropriations: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Frank Wolf: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Chaka Fattah: 
Ranking Member: 
Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies: 
Committee on Appropriations: 
House of Representatives: 

The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), within the Department of 
Justice, acts to protect and defend the United States against crime, 
terrorism, and foreign intelligence threats. Since September 11, 2001, 
the FBI's antiterrorism mission has greatly expanded and its efforts 
in other areas--such as cyber crime--have also grown. The agency's 
total headquarters workforce has increased by approximately 5 percent 
annually since 2001. As a result, the FBI has outgrown its main 
headquarters facility, the J. Edgar Hoover Building (Hoover Building) 
in Washington, D.C. Headquarters staff who cannot be accommodated in 
the Hoover Building are dispersed in over 40 leased annexes (annexes), 
the majority of which are located in the National Capital Region. FBI 
officials report that the dispersion of staff, combined with condition 
deficiencies at the Hoover Building and site, affects security and 
creates operational inefficiencies. In addition, these security, 
space, and building condition issues have raised congressional 
concerns about how well the Hoover Building and annexes meet the FBI's 
security requirements and operational needs. In its 2005 Asset 
Management Plan, the FBI identified the need for a new headquarters 
facility to support its strategic objectives, which include providing 
security for personnel and information in an efficient and cost-
effective workspace. To meet these objectives, the FBI has taken steps 
to document its headquarters facility requirements and, in 
collaboration with the General Services Administration (GSA), the 
government's real property steward, has studied a number of 
alternatives for meeting its needs. 

Congress directed us, in the explanatory statement accompanying the 
2009 Omnibus Appropriations Act,[Footnote 1] to review the Hoover 
Building and associated off-site locations in light of its concerns 
about the security posture of the Hoover Building and its inability to 
house the current FBI Headquarters workforce. We examined (1) the 
extent to which the Hoover Building and annexes support the FBI's 
operational requirements for security, space, and building condition 
and (2) the extent to which the FBI and GSA have followed leading 
capital decision-making practices in identifying alternatives for 
meeting the FBI's operational requirements and the extent to which 
each alternative would address these requirements. 

This report is a public version of a law enforcement sensitive report 
that we issued in July 2011. It communicates the publicly releasable 
aspects of our findings while omitting information that the FBI and 
DHS considered sensitive about the FBI's operations, the security 
posture of the FBI's facilities, and measures the FBI has put in place 
to protect its workforce. The overall methodology used for both 
reports is the same. 

To determine the extent to which the Hoover Building and annexes 
support the FBI's operational requirements for security, space, and 
building condition, we visited the Hoover Building and five annexes-- 
which we selected to illustrate different facility security levels and 
degrees of staff fragmentation--to examine conditions firsthand and 
interview on-site representatives from FBI divisions (programs) and 
security officials about those conditions. More specifically: 

* For security, we compared past site-specific facility security 
assessments (security assessments) for the Hoover Building and 15 of 
the annexes to federal security standards. For the Hoover Building, we 
also assessed whether recommendations to improve security were 
implemented. We spoke with agency security officials about the 
security assessments, risks, and challenges resulting from dispersed 
operations. Following our issuance of the law enforcement sensitive 
version of this report in July 2011, the FBI updated its security 
assessment of the Hoover Building, which we reviewed. 

* For space, we reviewed the size and location of current facilities 
and programs, and we interviewed FBI program officials to understand 
the effects on operations of having different programs housed in 
several locations. We also compared attributes of the Hoover Building--
such as its efficiency (how much of its space is usable for mission 
needs)--to GSA standards and guidance. 

* For building condition,[Footnote 2] we analyzed assessments of the 
Hoover Building's physical condition and compared this information to 
GSA policies for building condition. In addition, we examined GSA's 
asset business plan for the building[Footnote 3] and other studies to 
identify completed maintenance projects, deferred maintenance, and 
planned major repair and recapitalization projects, and we asked FBI 
and GSA officials about their assessments of the Hoover Building's 
condition.[Footnote 4] 

To determine the extent to which the FBI and GSA have followed leading 
capital decision-making practices in identifying alternatives for 
meeting the FBI's operational requirements, we compared the FBI's and 
GSA's planning actions against leading practices we have reported on 
in this area.[Footnote 5] In addition, we reviewed FBI and GSA studies 
of the FBI's facilities and operational requirements and identified 
the alternatives discussed in these studies for meeting the 
requirements. We determined that the alternatives fell into three 
broad categories--(1) modernize the Hoover Building, (2) demolish the 
Hoover Building and construct a new headquarters on the existing site, 
and (3) construct a new headquarters on a new site--each of which 
included a number of variations. For our analysis, we focused on the 
categories, since the appropriateness of the variations could not be 
determined without further study and would depend on site-specific 
conditions. We then assessed the extent to which each alternative 
would address the FBI's security, space, and building condition 
requirements. 

We did not independently analyze the FBI's requirements for security, 
which are based on its assessments of the threats it faces and their 
probability of occurrence; its requirements for space, which are based 
on its projections of each FBI program's future staffing and space 
needs, such as the need for secure conference rooms; or its process 
for deciding which programs to house in a new consolidated facility. 
In our view, such analyses were outside the scope of our review and 
would require extensive reviews of classified intelligence on threats 
and hostile groups, as well as of programmatic mission justifications 
for FBI branches and their associated staffing levels. We did, 
however, determine that the FBI senior leadership was involved in 
deciding which FBI programs should be colocated. Furthermore, because 
the FBI and GSA are still in the early stages of the facility planning 
process and had not finalized cost estimates for budgetary purposes at 
the time of our review, we did not validate cost estimates for new 
construction or past cost estimates for modernizing or redeveloping 
the Hoover Building and site. Appendix I contains a more detailed 
discussion of our scope and methodology. 

We conducted this performance audit from July 2010 to November 2011, 
in accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. 
Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain 
sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe 
that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

Background: 

In 1964, the National Capital Planning Commission (NCPC) approved the 
design concept for FBI headquarters. Construction started in 1967, and 
in 1974, FBI personnel began moving into the new building, which was 
named for the FBI's first director, J. Edgar Hoover (see figure 1). 
Situated on one entire city block in downtown Washington, D.C., and 
containing approximately 2.4 million gross square feet of space, the 
building is bounded by four major city streets--9th, 10th, and E 
Streets and Pennsylvania Avenue--all of which are open to public 
traffic (see figure 2). The building is a concrete structure, 7 
stories high on its Pennsylvania Avenue side and 11 stories high on 
its E Street side. A dry moat[Footnote 6] protects the building in 
addition to numerous antivehicular barriers. 

Figure 1: J. Edgar Hoover Building Facing Pennsylvania Avenue and 10th 
Street: 

[Refer to PDF for image: photograph] 

Source: GSA. 

[End of figure] 

Figure 2: Map Showing the J. Edgar Hoover Building and Surrounding 
Streets: 

[Refer to PDF for image: street map] 

Source: National Park Service. 

[End of figure] 

When the FBI first occupied the Hoover Building, it was primarily a 
law enforcement organization. Since then, its mission has grown in 
response to evolving threats and now includes counterterrorism, 
counterintelligence, weapons of mass destruction deterrence, and cyber 
security. Accordingly, use of the Hoover Building has changed to 
support new programs in these areas. For example, the Hoover Building 
originally housed a crime laboratory, and more space was dedicated to 
records storage. These functions have since been transferred to off-
site locations, making space available for new programs in the Hoover 
Building. 

The FBI's headquarters workforce has grown as the agency has assumed 
new mission responsibilities. In 2001, the FBI had 9,700 headquarters 
staff,[Footnote 7] working in 7 locations. Today, the FBI has 17,300 
headquarters staff, including those housed in more than 40 annexes, 
the majority of which are located within the National Capital 
Region.[Footnote 8] According to the FBI, programs in 21 of these off- 
site locations and in the Hoover Building should be colocated to meet 
the agency's mission requirements.[Footnote 9] In projecting its 
staffing levels from fiscal year 2010 through fiscal year 2018, the 
FBI estimated that its headquarters workforce will grow by a total of 
7 percent during that period. 

The FBI's headquarters facilities, like all facilities in the United 
States occupied by federal employees for nonmilitary activities, are 
subject to the Interagency Security Committee's (ISC) baseline 
facility security standards. The ISC, chaired by the Department of 
Homeland Security (DHS) and composed of representatives from all major 
federal departments and agencies, is tasked with coordinating federal 
agencies' facility protection efforts, developing security standards, 
and overseeing the implementation of security measures.[Footnote 10] 
In 2004, the ISC issued security criteria for federally owned 
facilities and space leased by agencies (hereafter referred to as the 
2004 ISC standards),[Footnote 11] establishing facility security 
standards for space owned or leased by the federal government. In 
2010, the ISC issued new standards that superseded the 2004 standards. 
The new security criteria (hereafter referred to as the 2010 ISC 
standards) were intended to make security an integral part of the 
operations, planning, design, construction, renovation, or acquisition 
of federal facilities--whether in owned or leased space.[Footnote 12] 
The 2010 ISC standards establish a baseline set of protective measures 
(countermeasures) to be applied at each facility according to its 
security level and outline a risk management process for agencies to 
follow as they assess the security of their facilities.[Footnote 13] 

To determine the security level of a federal facility, the ISC uses 
criteria that it issued in 2008. Factors considered in determining the 
facility security level (FSL) include the criticality of an agency's 
mission, the symbolism of the facility, and the building's size and 
population. The Hoover Building is categorized at the same FSL applied 
to the headquarters facilities of other agencies with national 
security missions, such as the Central Intelligence Agency and the 
Department of Defense. The FSLs of the FBI's annexes in the National 
Capital Region vary. 

In meeting its needs for office space, the FBI generally works through 
GSA, although it has received direct appropriations to construct 
specialized facilities, such as the FBI laboratory and academy 
training facilities,[Footnote 14] and has entered into leases on its 
own. GSA can use government-owned or leased facilities to meet an 
agency's space needs.[Footnote 15] If a facility is not available to 
meet the agency's needs and the estimated cost of a new facility 
exceeds a defined dollar threshold,[Footnote 16] GSA can request 
congressional authorization to construct or lease a new facility by 
submitting a project prospectus.[Footnote 17] GSA typically funds new 
federal construction and the acquisition of leased space from the 
Federal Buildings Fund (FBF).[Footnote 18] Agencies occupying GSA- 
controlled space (owned or leased) pay rent to GSA, which GSA deposits 
into the FBF. GSA then pays the landlord from the FBF for those 
buildings it leases.[Footnote 19] In addition to federal construction 
or leasing, GSA has the authority to enter into a sale-leaseback 
[Footnote 20] or a ground lease and leaseback[Footnote 21] arrangement 
through which GSA sells or leases federal land to a developer that 
builds a facility on the site and leases it back to GSA.[Footnote 22] 
We have previously reported that the FBF is not large enough to meet 
GSA's construction and major repair needs[Footnote 23] and that 
alternative financing strategies may be viable options for GSA to meet 
agencies' facilities needs.[Footnote 24] 

GSA has generally provided space in leased facilities for the FBI's 
expanded headquarters staff. We have also reported that GSA has used 
operating leases extensively to meet agencies' long-term space needs, 
even though building ownership is generally less costly.[Footnote 25] 
Both GSA and the FBI have generally concluded that the FBI has long-
term space needs and that its operations should be consolidated to 
achieve greater security and efficiency. Working with GSA, the FBI has 
studied a number of alternatives for consolidation. 

FBI Headquarters Facilities Present Security, Space, and Condition 
Challenges: 

The Hoover Building Does Not Meet the FBI's Long-Term Security 
Requirements: 

According to FBI officials, the Hoover Building does not meet the 
FBI's long-term security requirements.[Footnote 26] We found that 
planning for the FBI's headquarters security requirements has evolved 
over time. A 2005 GSA study and a 2009 FBI study cited different 
planning assumptions about the security requirements for a new FBI 
headquarters. The 2010 ISC standards do not prescribe security 
requirements for federal facilities like the Hoover Building or new 
facilities that an agency proposes to construct or lease. Instead, the 
2010 standards indicate that, in establishing requirements for 
existing or new facilities, agencies should determine what combination 
of countermeasures would provide an appropriate level of protection 
against identified threat scenarios that the ISC refers to as the 
"design-basis threat." Furthermore, the 2010 ISC standards indicate 
that whenever an agency-determined threat level deviates from the ISC 
design-basis threat baseline, the factors that influenced the agency's 
threat assessment must be documented and fully supported by detailed 
information as part of the assessment. 

In addition to the Hoover Building not meeting the FBI's long-term 
security requirements, FBI security officials told us on our site 
visits that they have some security concerns--to varying degrees--
about some of the headquarters annexes, including the following: 

* Proximity of non-FBI tenants to FBI employees performing sensitive 
operations. At least nine annexes are located in multitenant 
buildings, where some space is leased by the FBI and other space is 
leased by nonfederal tenants. While this arrangement does not 
automatically put FBI operations at risk, it heightens security 
concerns. 

* Lack of control over common areas. FBI security officials also cited 
a lack of control over common areas in multitenant buildings. For 
example, at one annex we visited, FBI officials told us that the 
building's landlord denied the FBI's request to implement some 
recommended countermeasures made in 2007 and in 2009 by DHS's Federal 
Protective Service (FPS), which conducts security assessments of 
facilities under the control or custody of GSA. The landlord chose not 
to implement the countermeasures, citing costs and concerns about 
inconveniencing nonfederal tenants in the building.[Footnote 27] 

* FBI Police response. According to FBI officials, security at the 
annexes is primarily handled by contract guards, local police, or the 
FBI's internal police force, the FBI Police, depending on the location 
and circumstances. The FBI Police does not physically station its 
personnel at the annexes; rather, it periodically conducts patrols of 
annexes. 

FBI Has Implemented Several Countermeasures to Improve the Security of 
the Hoover Building: 

Over the past several years, the FBI has implemented countermeasures 
at the Hoover Building to improve security, including: 

* upgrading the building's exterior windows; 

* moving and upgrading the security of the FBI business visitor center 
so that it now provides internal queuing for identification checks, an 
X-ray screening area, a badge office, and a secure waiting area; 

* strengthening barriers to prevent unauthorized access; 

* installing new doors to the building to meet the FBI's requirements 
for protection against forced entry; 

* securing air intakes to keep airborne contaminants out of the 
building; and: 

* paying the District of Columbia government to restrict public 
metered parking along one side of the building in order to prevent 
unscreened vehicles from parking or idling near the building. 

Although the FBI has implemented these countermeasures, others have 
yet to be implemented, and FBI officials did not provide historical 
documentation of the agency's rationale for not implementing them. FBI 
security officials we spoke with were not part of the earlier decision 
making, but suggested that some past recommendations were not 
implemented because of their high cost and potential impact on 
operations. A 2005 GSA study concluded that some of the 
recommendations would have been costly and disruptive to the FBI's 
operations within the building. Because FBI officials did not provide 
historical documentation of the FBI's rationale for not implementing 
some recommendations, it is difficult for us to determine why the FBI 
and GSA did not pursue them. More recently, in 2008, the FBI received 
approval from NCPC for one security project at the Hoover Building, 
but FBI officials reported they were unsuccessful in obtaining funding 
for the project before NCPC's approval expired. The FBI said it 
intends to resubmit its request for NCPC approval at the end of fiscal 
year 2011, and if the request is approved, it may attempt to obtain 
funding in fiscal year 2012. 

While implementing recommended countermeasures may not always be 
feasible--because of physical limitations or budgetary restrictions, 
for example--the 2010 ISC standards require agencies to document any 
decision to reject or defer the countermeasures' implementation, 
including whether the agency is willing to accept risk and whether 
there are any alternative strategies to meet the agency's required 
level of protection. This ISC standard is consistent with a component 
of our risk management framework that calls for agencies to identify 
and evaluate alternatives to mitigate risk, taking into account the 
alternatives' likely effect on risk and their cost.[Footnote 28] 

FBI Recently Performed a Comprehensive Security Assessment of the 
Hoover Building and Intends to Have the Security of Its Annexes 
Assessed against the 2010 ISC Standards: 

FBI officials performed a comprehensive security assessment of the 
Hoover Building in 2011 using the 2010 ISC facility security 
standards. This assessment, which the FBI provided to us after we 
issued our law enforcement sensitive version of this report in July 
2011, was the FBI's first comprehensive review of the building's 
security since 2002, although FBI officials told us they had assessed 
the security of selected portions of the building during the interim. 
For federal buildings under the control or custody of GSA, such as the 
Hoover Building, FPS normally conducts periodic security assessments 
unless the tenant agency waives the requirement for FPS to do so. The 
FBI waived the requirement for FPS to conduct security assessments of 
the Hoover Building, acknowledging that it would assume responsibility 
for conducting the assessments itself. However, the FBI did not 
conduct a comprehensive assessment of the Hoover Building from 2002 
until 2011 because, according to FBI officials, the FBI had concluded 
that an updated assessment would be unlikely to yield new information. 

Under the current ISC standards, agencies are to conduct security 
assessments of their facilities at regular intervals, depending on the 
building's FSL. The requirement for the Hoover Building is every 3 
years. The ISC also requires agencies to document their security 
assessment findings in a report, including the threats and 
vulnerabilities they have identified and the specific countermeasures 
they have recommended based on their building's FSL. Conducting 
regular security assessments is also an important component of one of 
our key practices in protecting federal facilities--allocating 
resources using a risk management approach. This practice emphasizes 
the need to identify threats and assess vulnerabilities in order to 
develop countermeasures and to prioritize the allocation of resources 
as conditions change.[Footnote 29] 

In July 2011, we reported that an updated security assessment would 
allow the FBI to fully assess the building against the 2010 ISC 
standards, evaluate if additional security technologies could be 
implemented, and document decisions about whether to implement certain 
recommendations or accept risk going forward. We also noted that an 
updated security assessment would provide the FBI with current 
information to help prioritize its allocation of security-related 
resources across all of its facilities. We recommended that the FBI 
update the Hoover Building's security assessment using the 2010 ISC 
standards, including (1) documenting threats, (2) analyzing the 
building security requirements, and (3) indicating whether 
recommendations would be implemented. 

Subsequent to our July 2011 law enforcement sensitive report, the FBI 
completed a security assessment of the Hoover Building. This security 
assessment was conducted by the FBI's Physical Security Unit and 
coordinated with the FBI Police and the FBI's Facilities and Logistics 
Services Division. FBI security staff evaluated security conditions 
against specific criteria outlined in the 2010 ISC standards. 
According to our analysis, the assessment covered some areas that were 
not covered in the 2002 assessment. Moreover, the assessment 
documented both the security posture of the Hoover Building and the 
FBI's building security requirements in relation to baseline ISC 
requirements. Where appropriate, the assessment included 
recommendations, and those recommendations were recently forwarded to 
the FBI's executive management for consideration. Currently, the FBI 
is in the process of determining its response to these 
recommendations, some of which would require capital investments in 
the building. FBI needs time to make final decisions on some 
recommendations and may need to reach agreement with GSA as the 
federal steward for the building. As the FBI determines its response 
to the recommendations, it is important that it document decisions 
because of their budget implications and effect on the planning for 
its long-term facility needs. 

According to FBI security officials, they were not aware of any 
countermeasures that needed to be implemented at the annexes. Although 
they indicated that they do have security concerns about headquarters 
annexes, such as lack of control over building common areas, the 
officials told us the annexes generally meet the 2004 ISC standards 
for leased space. 

We received security assessments or other security-related 
information--from both FPS and the FBI--for most, but not all, of the 
21 annexes.[Footnote 30] According to the FBI, it intends to request 
that FPS assess the annexes' compliance with the 2010 ISC standards 
when the new standards are fully implemented and then evaluate the 
need for any additional countermeasures.[Footnote 31] Tracking the 
implementation status of all countermeasures recommended in FPS or FBI 
security assessments will provide the FBI with complete, current 
information on any security vulnerabilities at its annexes, and help 
it determine the extent to which the annexes meet the 2010 ISC 
standards and the FBI's security requirements. 

The Hoover Building's Design Limits Space Efficiencies and Hampers 
Collaboration; Dispersion of Staff Causes Operational and Logistical 
Challenges: 

Although the Hoover Building is large, occupying an entire city block, 
much of its approximately 2.4 million gross square feet of space is 
unusable, and the remaining usable space[Footnote 32]--according to a 
2007 study conducted for GSA and the FBI--is not designed to meet the 
needs of today's FBI.[Footnote 33] According to a 2008 GSA market 
appraisal of the building, its design is inefficient and functionally 
obsolete.[Footnote 34] According to the FBI, the space is laid out as 
efficiently as possible, but the original design of the building's 
floor plates is inefficient.[Footnote 35] For example, the building 
provides a lower percentage of usable square footage for office and 
mission functions than a federal office building built to current 
design standards. In its 2010 facilities standards,[Footnote 36] GSA 
established a space efficiency target of 75 percent for new federal 
office buildings, based on the ratio of usable to gross square 
footage.[Footnote 37] The Hoover Building's efficiency ratio is 53 
percent. Figure 3 illustrates some of the features that limit the 
building's efficiency. 

Figure 3: Design Features That Limit the Hoover Building's Efficiency: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustration] 

Building structural elements-—such as load-bearing columns and trusses 
associated with cantilevered upper stories-—limit opportunities to 
reconfigure interior spaces and convert some closed office areas to 
open space. 

Work areas are too deep—-from the windows to the building core area—-
which limits access to natural daylight. Today’s federal construction 
standards advocate access to daylight as a means of improving energy
and environmental efficiency. 

Courtyard results in some interior space being allocated to long, 
inefficient corridors, limiting circulation within the building. 

Open-air second level is not usable for office space. 

Source: GAO analysis of a GSA-commissioned space effectiveness study 
and GSA facility design standards. 

[End of figure] 

To accommodate additional staff at the Hoover Building, the FBI has 
reconfigured parts of the building's interior, including converting 
about 200,000 square feet of basement, cafeteria, and storage space to 
offices. Renovations were implemented reactively as the agency's 
mission grew. Some areas could not be renovated as open spaces, as 
desired, because the building's original design hampered such changes. 
While converting building support space has provided the FBI with some 
additional offices in the Hoover Building, GSA's facility condition 
assessment[Footnote 38] indicates that those offices may not be 
adequately ventilated and cooled. As a result, some space may provide 
an uncomfortable working environment for staff. GSA has a project 
planned to address ventilation requirements. While the project was 
proposed as early as 2004, we found that GSA has been unable to get 
the design approvals needed to implement the project.[Footnote 39] FBI 
officials we spoke with also indicated that the building lost some 
functionality--for example, they said less space was available for 
meetings--after those spaces were converted to offices to accommodate 
the agency's rapid growth. 

The FBI and GSA have concluded that the Hoover Building's interior 
design remains a significant barrier to staff collaboration and 
information sharing across teams.[Footnote 40] Furthermore, GSA has 
concluded that the building's structure constrains further increases 
in its efficiency.[Footnote 41] For example, a 2007 study for GSA and 
the FBI found that the Hoover Building's long corridors and closed 
office suites result in significant fragmentation among working groups 
that hampers communication and collaboration and that the building's 
inflexible design is incompatible with changing mission needs. FBI 
officials told us that whereas newer office buildings with modular 
designs can be quickly and cost-efficiently reconfigured to 
accommodate new missions or staff growth, the Hoover Building would 
likely require months of modernization work to achieve similar 
results.[Footnote 42] According to senior FBI and GSA officials, space 
restrictions at the Hoover Building limit the FBI's ability to meet 
two GSA workplace goals for the next decade--to improve collaboration 
and communication and to make more efficient use of space.[Footnote 43] 

Because the Hoover Building cannot readily be modified to accommodate 
new mission needs and staff growth, and because core headquarters 
staff are therefore dispersed among multiple annexes, the FBI now 
faces several operational and logistical challenges. According to FBI 
officials, space constraints at the Hoover Building and the resulting 
dispersion of staff sometimes prevent the FBI from physically locating 
certain types of analysts and specialists together. For example, 
according to an FBI report, one FBI division within the Hoover 
Building is not able to embed analysts within other offices--to 
facilitate greater collaboration--because of the lack of available 
space. During our site visits, FBI officials reported logistical 
challenges as well, including a lack of facilities at a few annexes 
for discussing some classified information, known as sensitive 
compartmented information facilities (SCIF). As a result, some FBI 
personnel told us they have to travel to meetings in different 
locations across the National Capital Region, resulting in inefficient 
use of their time and the FBI's transportation resources. Furthermore, 
FBI officials at three annexes we visited reported that the private 
landlords responsible for building maintenance at their sites were 
often slow to respond to maintenance requests from the FBI, such as 
requests for repairs to malfunctioning heating and cooling systems. 

To mitigate the operational and logistical challenges of dispersion 
and to avoid further complications as its workforce continues to grow, 
the FBI has centralized its real property management functions for 
headquarters and has begun to take a more focused approach to managing 
its space needs. In 2005, the FBI established a central Space 
Management Unit[Footnote 44] and started assessing its headquarters 
space needs twice a year. In addition, it initiated an interim phased 
plan to consolidate some leases into fewer facilities based on the 
lease expiration dates until it can obtain a facility designed to 
consolidate operations in the Hoover Building and in the 21 annexes it 
has determined should be colocated. 

The Hoover Building Is Aging and Showing Signs of Deterioration, but 
Needed Repairs and Recapitalization Projects Have Been Deferred: 

Although the Hoover Building is nearing its life-cycle age and 
exhibiting signs of deterioration,[Footnote 45] GSA has decided to 
limit major repair and recapitalization investments to those systems 
or components that affect life safety and building functionality until 
it is determined whether the FBI will remain a long-term occupant of 
the building.[Footnote 46] According to GSA, its investments have been 
appropriate to ensure that FBI operations are not at risk. For 
example, since 2004, GSA has spent approximately $22 million to 
upgrade components and systems in the Hoover Building.[Footnote 47] 
Nevertheless, a 2009 GSA physical condition survey estimated that the 
building requires about $80.5 million in further repairs and upgrades. 
The condition survey identifies repair needs to the building's air- 
handling distribution systems and ductwork ($44.2 million), electrical 
switchgear ($23.3 million), and elevators ($2.3 million), among other 
systems.[Footnote 48] GSA officials told us these repairs have been 
deferred. GSA also has plans to repair the building's concrete façade 
($8.9 million)[Footnote 49] and to replace the entire fire alarm 
system ($22 million), but has not yet obtained funding for either 
project. GSA officials indicated that the fire alarm system 
replacement would most likely be included in any future renovation of 
the Hoover Building. 

During a tour of the Hoover Building given by FBI officials, we 
observed several signs of exterior and interior deterioration. One FBI 
official stated that some areas of the upper-level exterior façade 
have deteriorated over time, heightening the risk that pieces of 
concrete could fall and strike pedestrians below. As a precautionary 
measure, GSA and the FBI have installed netting around the upper level 
of the building to catch any falling debris. In addition, water 
infiltration from the courtyard has corroded parts of the parking 
garage ceiling. The basement is also prone to flooding from the 
interior courtyard during periods of rain. Figure 4 depicts conditions 
we observed during our tour. 

Figure 4: Conditions GAO Observed at the Hoover Building: 

[Refer to PDF for image: 2 photographs] 

Concrete material that was part of the buliding's exterior facing--the 
building envelope or skin--that came loose and was removed from the 
building. 

Recycling bin rigged with a plastic chute to direct rainwater runoff 
that infiltrated the basement. 

Source: GAO. 

[End of figure] 

At the time of our review, the Hoover Building was categorized as a 
"core asset" in GSA's asset business plan.[Footnote 50] However, this 
categorization was inconsistent with GSA's decision to limit major 
repair and recapitalization investments in the building. GSA core 
assets generally have a long-term holding period of at least 15 years. 
For buildings with a long-term holding period, GSA policy states that 
reinvestment will be funded to ensure maintenance of the building's 
quality and condition at levels appropriate to meet continuing mission 
and customer needs.[Footnote 51] This includes all preventative 
maintenance, necessary upgrades, and enhancements to the building and 
its systems to maintain the asset in appropriate condition. GSA's near-
term maintenance policy for the Hoover Building is more consistent 
with GSA's policy for a "transition asset." A transition asset 
typically has a 6-to 15-year holding period as its tenant prepares for 
relocation to a new federal building or a leased building. For such an 
asset, GSA funds projects that meet basic needs in transition, but 
avoids any major reinvestment. In its technical comments on our draft 
law enforcement sensitive report, GSA reported that it has recently 
recategorized the Hoover Building as a transition asset to reflect the 
FBI's concerns about the building's security, condition, and 
efficiency, as well as GSA's own decision to limit investments in the 
building. GSA further reported that its categorization of the building 
may change again if the FBI moves or further study of the asset points 
to a change. Regardless of how the building is categorized, it will 
likely be used for several more years, and its large backlog of 
deferred maintenance, major repairs, and recapitalization requirements 
increases the potential for systems or components to fail and 
potentially disrupt FBI operations. 

Consistent with Leading Practices Thus Far, the FBI and GSA Have 
Identified Alternatives for Better Meeting the FBI's Facility Needs 
and Are Developing an Approach for Moving Forward: 

FBI and GSA Planning Actions Have Been Generally Consistent with 
Applicable Leading Practices in Capital Decision Making: 

Over the past decade, the FBI and GSA have conducted a number of 
studies (see figure 5) to assess the FBI headquarters facilities' 
strategic and mission needs. Through these studies, they have 
determined the condition of the FBI's current assets and identified 
gaps between current and needed capabilities, as well as studied a 
range of alternatives to meet the FBI's requirements. (See appendix II 
for more detail on the studies undertaken by the FBI and GSA.) These 
activities are consistent with applicable GAO leading practices in 
capital decision making.[Footnote 52] 

Figure 5: Timeline of FBI and GSA Studies of FBI Facility Requirements: 

[Refer to PDF for image: timeline] 

2001: Condition assessment. 

2002: Security assessment. 

2005: Headquarters housing strategy. 

2006: Site study. 

2007: Space study. 

2008: Real estate appraisal. 

2009: Relocation study. 

2010: Consolidation report (final draft). 

Source: GAO analysis. 

[End of figure] 

GAO Capital Decision-Making Practices 1 and 2: Assess Requirements and 
Determine Gaps between Current and Needed Capabilities: 

Consistent with our first two leading practices in capital decision 
making--to conduct a comprehensive assessment of needs to meet an 
agency's mission goals and objectives and to identify the current 
capabilities and condition of existing assets (i.e., facilities) to 
meet those needs--the FBI and GSA conducted facility condition and 
security assessments of the Hoover Building in 2001 and 2002[Footnote 
53] and identified recommendations in both areas. For example, the 
poor condition of the Hoover Building was identified as a gap in the 
FBI's need for a functional headquarters. In addition, as noted, the 
FBI's 2005 Asset Management Plan[Footnote 54] identified the need for 
a new headquarters facility to safeguard personnel and information 
within efficient and cost-effective workspace, and the FBI has worked 
with GSA to identify its strategic facility and space requirements. 
Also in 2005, the FBI Director and a Deputy FBI Director--with input 
from assistant directors--decided which FBI programs should be 
colocated in a headquarters facility to meet the agency's strategic 
and mission requirements. According to their analysis, the FBI 
Director; the National Security Branch, including its counterterrorism 
and intelligence divisions; the Criminal, Cyber, Response, and 
Services Branch; and other FBI headquarters functions, such as the 
Information Technologies Branch, would need to be colocated. 
Throughout the decision-making process, FBI senior officials have 
consulted with senior GSA regional and national officials to discuss 
the FBI's requirements and the range of alternatives to meet the FBI's 
needs. In 2007, GSA and the FBI found that the need to colocate 
certain FBI programs--to better enable collaboration and facilitate 
information sharing[Footnote 55]--could not be met in the Hoover 
Building and the annexes and that the FBI's operations in the Hoover 
Building and 21 of its annexes in the National Capital Region should 
be consolidated.[Footnote 56] This decision to consolidate is also 
consistent with a 2010 presidential memorandum directing federal 
agencies to eliminate lease arrangements that are not cost-effective, 
pursue consolidation opportunities, and identify reductions when new 
space is acquired, as the FBI pointed out in its 2010 consolidation 
report.[Footnote 57] 

In the studies they conducted from 2005 through 2009, the FBI and GSA 
identified security requirements for a consolidated FBI headquarters 
facility. Our previously issued law enforcement sensitive report 
describes these security requirements. The 2005 through 2009 planning 
studies also identified space requirements for an FBI headquarters 
facility. For example, a formal space programming study performed by 
the FBI's architectural consultant established space requirements for 
approximately 11,600 personnel and for support headquarters spaces, 
such as conference rooms and SCIF space. This personnel figure was 
based on current staffing levels for the functions that the FBI had 
determined should be colocated in a headquarters facility, adjusted to 
allow for limited future growth. To further identify the FBI's 
headquarters space requirements, the architectural consultant and 
staff from the FBI's Facilities and Logistics Services Division met 
with representatives from the FBI's branches and their divisions to 
assess their operational needs, such as access to SCIF space or 
proximity to another organization or function. In addition, the FBI 
Facilities and Logistics Services Division established space standards 
for staff after reviewing GSA and industry benchmarks.[Footnote 58] 
According to the FBI, it requires modern, open-plan office space for 
its operations and shared team spaces to promote collaboration and 
information sharing across mission teams[Footnote 59] and to permit 
easy reconfiguration to meet changing needs, such as space for newly 
formed internal and interagency task forces.[Footnote 60] The FBI also 
identified requirements for large SCIFs to fully support its 
divisions' classified discussion and processing needs. 

GAO Capital Decision-Making Practice 3: Identify Alternatives to Close 
Gaps: 

Consistent with our third leading practice in capital decision making--
decide how best to meet a gap by identifying and evaluating 
alternative approaches--the FBI and GSA, in their 2005 through 2009 
planning studies, identified and analyzed a range of alternatives, 
together with their estimated costs and benefits, for meeting the gap 
between the FBI's current and needed space. These alternatives fall 
into three categories: (1) modernizing the Hoover Building;[Footnote 
61] (2) demolishing the building and constructing a new facility on 
the existing site;[Footnote 62] and (3) acquiring a new consolidated 
headquarters facility--through federal construction or lease--on a new 
site.[Footnote 63] Figures 6 and 7 provide summary information about 
these three alternatives and the status quo, which we include because 
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) requires agencies to submit 
baseline information when they propose a major capital acquisition. 
[Footnote 64] 

Figure 6: The Baseline Status Quo and Alternative 1 Consider Continued 
Use of the Hoover Building: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustrated text] 

Baseline: FBI remains in the Hoover Building and annex offices and 
implements upgrades over time: 

Security: The FBI's security concerns about its headquarters 
facilities would remain. 

Operations: Operations would remain fragmented. Fragmentation could 
increase if the FBI headquarters workforce grows by an estimated 7 
percent total by 2018. 

Condition: The Hoover Building would continue to age, and system 
deterioration would continue if major projects were not initiated.  

Costs: Total annex lease costs would increase if more leased space 
were needed to meet FBI's growing needs.  

Time to implement: Life-cycle, life-safety, and security upgrades 
would be implemented over time as needed and as funding  
became available.   

Alternative 1: The Hoover Building modernized, leases consolidated: 

Security: The FBI's security concerns about its headquarters 
facilities would remain. 
  
Operations: Operations would remain fragmented because usable space 
within the Hoover Building would not greatly increase. Fragmentation 
could increase and disruption would occur during implementation of the 
building modernization as staff move into swing space—outside the 
Hoover Building—during renovation. Also during renovation, staff could 
have difficulty accessing space suitable for classified work. After 
the renovation, fragmentation would continue but might be alleviated 
as leases at the annexes expire and if FBI and GSA could consolidate 
those annexes into fewer, but larger, facilities. However, FBI's 
projected growth would likely result in more staff being located in 
annexes outside of the Hoover Building. 

Condition: The Hoover Building's physical condition would improve with 
modernization. A modernization could meet some Leadership in Energy 
and Environmental Design (LEED)[A] standards, but it would not be 
comparable to a new building meeting LEED gold criteria as GSA 
requires for newly constructed federal facilities. 

Costs: GSA's preliminary cost estimate for modernization is about $1.7 
billion based on 2007 construction cost factors. 
* The costs did not include any additional leased annex space that 
would be required to meet the FBI's projected staffing growth by 2018. 
* According to a report by one of GSA's consultants, modernization 
costs would significantly exceed new construction costs. 
* According to GSA officials, generally, the cost of providing similar 
levels of security to an existing building is more expensive than 
including those items in the construction of a newly designed building. 
* According to GSA officials, the Hoover Building could be modernized 
at less cost for another federal agency-—one without the FBI's high 
security needs-—if the FBI vacated the facility and the construction 
contractor renovated the building before the new tenant moved in. 

Time to implement: This project is estimated to take approximately 14 
years to complete assuming a phased approach with swing space provided 
for FBI operations during construction. 

Source: GAO analysis. 

[A] The U.S. Green Building Council's Leadership in Energy and 
Environmental Design green building rating system defines sustainable 
features for buildings and includes a set of performance standards 
that can be incorporated into the design and construction of 
buildings. When the standards are met during facility design and 
construction, credits are earned to enable buildings to be certified 
in accordance with an established four-level scale--certified, silver, 
gold, and platinum. 

[End of figure] 

Figure 7: Alternatives 2 and 3 Consider New Construction on the 
Existing Hoover Site or a New Site: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustrated text] 

Alternative 2: The Hoover Building is demolished, new building built 
on existing site: 

Security: The FBI's security concerns about its headquarters facility 
would remain.  

Operations: Operations would remain fragmented because any new 
facility on the Hoover Building site would still not have enough 
square footage to meet the FBI's operational needs. The new building 
would likely be smaller than the existing facility. Fragmentation 
would also increase while FBI staff were relocated during 
construction. Finding appropriate swing space, including space for 
classified work, could be difficult. 

Condition: The facility would be designed to meet LEED certification 
requirements and GSA design and workplace standards.  

Costs: In 2006. a GSA contractor estimated construction costs of $850 
million. The estimate does not include the costs of: 
* tenant-specific operations (e.g., the costs of constructing SCIF 
space in the new building), leasing swing space for employees, moving 
twice, and constructing temporary SCIFs in swing space; and; 
* additional leased annex space that would be required to meet the 
FBI's projected staffing growth by 2018.  

Time to implement: This project is estimated to take approximately 9 
years to complete.  

Alternative 3: New consolidated headquarters facility built on new 
site: 

Security: The new consolidated headquarters facility should be able to 
fully meet the FBI's security requirements based on the 2010 ISC 
security standard. 

Operations: Efficiency would increase because the new facility would 
allow for the optimal organization of divisions to include FBI's 
projected staffing growth. Space within the new facility would be 
designed, using an open-plan concept, to allow for future 
reconfiguration in response to changes in FBI's mission. 

Condition: The new facility would be located on about 50 acres of land 
and accessible to public transportation systems. The facility would be 
designed to meet LEED certification requirements and GSA design and 
workplace standards. 

Costs: In 2010, the FBI and GSA estimated a project cost of 
approximately $1.2 billion to acquire a new site and design and 
construct a new headquarters facility on it. The estimate does not 
include the costs of: 
* meeting FBI requirements for equipment, system furniture, moves, and 
other items; 
* private financing incurred by a private developer—-such as the costs 
of securing a construction loan and paying any interest on it-—should 
GSA contract with a developer to construct the building and lease it 
to GSA; and; 
* the developer's return on investment and a possible lease increase 
when the lease was renewed. 

Time to implement: This project is estimated to take approximately 7 
years to complete. 

Source: GAO analysis. 

[End of figure] 

The cost estimates in figures 6 and 7 cannot be compared because the 
studies and estimates were completed at different times, for different 
purposes, by different consultants, using different methodologies and 
facility specifications. 

GAO Capital Decision-Making Practice 4: Establish a Review and 
Approval Framework: 

As the FBI and GSA continue to advance through the capital planning 
process, our leading practices in capital decision making can help 
guide their efforts, as well as inform decision makers' evaluations of 
any preferred alternative and other alternatives considered. Our 
fourth leading practice--establish a review and approval framework 
that is supported by analyses[Footnote 65]--encourages management 
reviews and approvals, supported by the proper financial, technical, 
and risk analyses that are critical in making sound capital investment 
decisions. 

OMB's guidance, together with GSA's Capital Planning Program Guide, 
provides a capital asset review framework such as our fourth leading 
practice describes. OMB's guidance requires GSA--if GSA constructs or 
leases a headquarters facility for the FBI's use--to submit a capital 
asset business case in support of the project. According to OMB's 
guidance, the FBI and GSA need to partner to develop the business 
case--providing input on the estimated project costs and financing 
strategies[Footnote 66]--but the design and construction budget 
request would be part of GSA's annual budget submission to OMB if the 
construction is to be funded through the FBF. (See appendix III for 
information on the FBF.) This business case should include the total 
estimated life-cycle costs--for the preferred alternative and the 
other alternatives the agencies considered[Footnote 67]--including the 
costs of acquisition, operations, maintenance, and disposal.[Footnote 
68] In addition, GSA's guide directs GSA to conduct a variety of 
reviews, such as site feasibility studies and environmental analyses, 
designed to ensure that projects are feasible and in compliance with 
all federal construction requirements. 

GAO Capital Decision-Making Practice 5: Rank and Select an Alternative: 

As GSA develops a capital asset business case for OMB with input from 
the FBI, it will have to rank the alternatives the agencies considered 
and select a preferred alternative. This ranking, when weighed against 
other relative priorities that the FBI and GSA will have to evaluate, 
would be consistent with our fifth capital decision-making practice-- 
rank and select projects based on established criteria. FBI officials 
have preliminarily concluded that their security and space 
requirements can be met only through the construction of a new 
headquarters facility on a new site. GSA officials have thus far 
generally concluded that the FBI has long-term space needs and that 
FBI operations should be consolidated to achieve greater security and 
efficiency, but have not finalized their construction cost estimates. 
According to GSA officials, the FBI and GSA will discuss the FBI's 
needs with OMB, and a final decision will be based on the results of a 
more comprehensive analysis that GSA will complete with FBI input for 
OMB. For the preferred alternative, GSA officials said they will need 
to undertake a final due diligence process to revalidate the FBI's 
program requirements, update costs, and initiate feasibility studies--
such as an assessment of the likelihood that sites are available in 
the National Capital Region--so as to develop a detailed prospectus 
for formal OMB approval and congressional consideration.[Footnote 69] 

Our leading practices state that prudent decision makers also should 
consider various funding options available to them. In the case of 
real property, that means considering other funding alternatives in 
comparison to funding new construction or a modernization through the 
FBF. In separate interviews, both GSA's Deputy Administrator and 
Director of the Office of Real Property Asset Management indicated 
that GSA will undertake a thorough analysis of a range of financing 
strategies as part its due diligence. (See appendix III for a 
description of some of the financing strategies that GSA may 
consider.) According to GSA, it almost always recommends federal 
construction using the FBF because this is usually the lowest cost 
alternative. However, GSA reports that in the current budgetary 
environment, it believes that alternative strategies such as the 
ground lease and leaseback arrangement--providing for eventual 
ownership of the building by the government--may need to be 
considered.[Footnote 70] 

After GSA and the FBI identify a preferred alternative and financing 
strategy, and if the alternative entails constructing a new federal 
facility through the FBF, GSA will have to rank the need for any FBI 
headquarters capital project against other FBI and governmentwide 
facility needs. GSA ranks projects from all agencies that have 
identified requirements--first by GSA region and then nationally. The 
GSA Administrator decides which major prospectus projects to propose 
within GSA's budget based on recommendations and input from the 
Commissioner of the Public Buildings Service, among others. While GSA 
has general criteria for prioritizing capital construction and major 
modernization needs, it does not specifically include security among 
its ranking criteria. Instead, according to a GSA official, the agency 
relies on its customers to convey their mission-critical needs in a 
way that reflects which issues, such as security, are critical to 
them. At this time, GSA officials could not indicate how a new FBI 
headquarters facility--or a major modernization of the Hoover 
Building--might be ranked in relation to other competing federal asset 
needs. FBI staff we spoke with indicated that a new headquarters 
project has the support of the FBI Director, but it is unclear whether 
a new headquarters is the most important facility need for the FBI or 
whether regional field office facility needs may be more important. 

The FBI and GSA plan to continue working together to reach a decision 
with OMB on how best to meet the FBI's needs. GSA reports that fiscal 
year 2014 is likely the earliest that any budget request and 
prospectus might be put forth for congressional consideration. Based 
on that insight and our review of preliminary FBI and GSA schedules, 
we estimate that the earliest that any project could be completed 
would be fiscal year 2020. 

Conclusions: 

With its employees dispersed throughout the National Capital Region 
and many of them housed in the aging and inefficient Hoover Building--
a facility constructed prior to current ISC standards governing 
security countermeasures--the FBI is under pressure to find an 
alternative that will meet its security, space, and building condition 
requirements. Any alternative will take years to implement and is 
likely to cost over a billion dollars. It is therefore important that 
the choice of an alternative be based on up-to-date assessments of the 
FBI's security, space, and building condition needs. In the interim, 
the FBI and GSA may have opportunities to further enhance security and 
address condition deficiencies at the FBI's current facilities. 

For the next several years or more, the FBI's headquarters workforce 
will be dispersed between the Hoover Building and the headquarters 
annexes. During this time, it is important that the FBI and FPS 
conduct security assessments of the annexes, as required by the 2010 
ISC standards, and that the FBI track the implementation status of 
recommended countermeasures for all its headquarters facilities. For 
the FBI, documentation of decisions to implement recommendations-- 
whether made in its 2011 security assessment of the Hoover Building or 
in future assessments of its headquarters annexes against the 2010 ISC 
standards--could inform decisions on how best to meet the FBI's long- 
term headquarters facility needs. Complete, current information on 
security needs and the status of recommended countermeasures--some 
that have budget implications--at both the Hoover Building and the 
annexes could indicate to the FBI whether it is allocating its 
security resources as efficiently as possible to mitigate risks. Such 
information could also help the FBI and GSA evaluate alternatives to 
the FBI's current dispersed headquarters structure and develop a 
business case to support a budget request for the alternative that 
they determine would best meet the FBI's security needs. 

Given the likelihood that FBI employees will be housed in the Hoover 
Building for several more years no matter which alternative is 
ultimately selected, and that the building may remain in GSA's 
portfolio whether it is occupied by the FBI or another federal tenant, 
it is important to ensure that GSA's current strategy for maintaining 
the facility is appropriate. The deferred maintenance, repairs, and 
recapitalization projects that have accumulated under this strategy 
could lead to system or component failures and potentially disrupt FBI 
operations. Allowing the building to deteriorate further could also 
make it difficult to house another agency in the Hoover Building if 
the FBI moves to a different location. 

Ultimately, decisions about the future of the FBI's headquarters 
facilities will require careful consideration of policy matters 
related to the FBI's mission and security needs and competing budget 
priorities, as well as other factors, such as the availability of a 
suitably sized site in the National Capital Region where the FBI's 
headquarters operations could be colocated. Currently, planning for a 
new FBI headquarters is ongoing, and GSA has yet to submit a business 
case for a preferred alternative to OMB, which is essential in the 
decision as to which specific alternative and financing strategy to 
pursue. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

To ensure that complete, current security information is being used to 
minimize risks to FBI facilities, operations, and personnel and to 
inform a final decision on how best to meet the FBI's long-term 
facility requirements, we recommend that the Attorney General direct 
the FBI Director to take the following two actions: 

* Document whether any recommendations from the FBI's 2011 security 
assessment will be implemented at the Hoover Building. 

* Track the implementation status of all recommendations made in FPS 
or FBI security assessments--of both the Hoover Building and the FBI's 
headquarters annexes--using the 2010 ISC standards. Where 
recommendations are not implemented, document the rationale for 
accepting risk, including any alternate strategies that are considered. 

Given that the FBI will likely remain in the Hoover Building for at 
least the next several years, we also recommend that the GSA 
Administrator direct the Commissioner of the Public Buildings Service 
to take the following action: 

* Evaluate GSA's current strategy to minimize major repair and 
recapitalization investments and take action to address any facility 
condition issues that could put FBI operations at risk and lead to 
further deterioration of the building, potentially affecting continued 
use of the Hoover Building by the FBI or any future tenant. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

We provided a draft of the law enforcement sensitive version of this 
report to the Department of Justice, GSA, and DHS for review and 
comment. In that law enforcement sensitive report we also recommended 
that the Attorney General direct the FBI Director to update the Hoover 
Building's security assessment using the 2010 ISC standards--to 
include undertaking an analysis of its building security requirements, 
documenting if threat scenarios exceed the ISC design-basis threat, 
and indicating whether recommendations would be implemented. Given 
that the FBI took action to address part of the recommendation--
subsequent to our July 2011 law enforcement sensitive report but prior 
to this public version--we modified the recommendation to reflect the 
FBI's recent security assessment. Specifically, the security 
assessment documents threats and analyzes building security 
requirements consistent with ISC security standards, but does not 
indicate whether recommended actions will be implemented. This is 
reasonable given the short period of time since our report and the 
FBI's ensuing analysis. We therefore revised the first recommendation 
above to focus on the need for the FBI to document decisions on the 
2011 security assessment's recommendations. 

Our July 2011 law enforcement sensitive report also recommended that 
the FBI track the implementation status of all recommendations in FPS 
or FBI security assessments. We will continue to monitor the FBI's 
decisions and actions related to its security assessment of the Hoover 
Building--and the security assessments of the FBI headquarters annexes-
-as indicated in the recommendations above. 

For security reasons and for clarity, we made additional modifications 
to the language used in the above recommendations to the Attorney 
General compared to the language we used in our July 2011 law 
enforcement sensitive report. 

We received written comments from the FBI on our law enforcement 
sensitive report on behalf of the Department of Justice. We also 
received written comments from GSA and DHS on that report. The FBI 
concurred with our recommendations and said that its primary concern 
in finding a long-term solution for its headquarters facility needs is 
to mitigate the operational impact of a fragmented workforce located 
at multiple sites across a wide geographic area. The FBI also cited 
concerns that its current headquarters housing is inefficient and 
expensive, and stated that a new, consolidated headquarters facility 
is one of the FBI's highest priorities. GSA indicated that it is 
currently taking appropriate action to implement our recommendation 
and remains committed to making all necessary investments in the 
Hoover Building to ensure ongoing operations until a long-term 
solution for the FBI can be developed. Written comments--on our law 
enforcement sensitive report--from the FBI, GSA, and DHS are reprinted 
with sensitive information redacted in appendixes IV through VI, 
respectively. The FBI, GSA, and DHS provided additional clarifying and 
technical comments, which we incorporated throughout the report as 
appropriate in consideration of sensitivity concerns. 

In addition, we provided a draft of this public report to the FBI, 
GSA, and DHS for review. Those agencies provided no additional 
comments. 

We are providing copies of this report to appropriate congressional 
committees, the Attorney General, the Director of the Federal Bureau 
of Investigation, the Administrator of the General Services 
Administration, the Secretary of Homeland Security, and other 
interested parties. In addition, this report will also be available at 
no charge on the GAO Web site at [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staffs have any questions about this report, please 
contact David C. Maurer at (202) 512-9627, maurerd@gao.gov, or David 
J. Wise at (202) 512-2834, wised@gao.gov. Contact points for our 
Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on 
the last page of this report. GAO staff who made key contributions to 
this report are listed in appendix VII. 

Signed by: 

David C. Maurer: 
Director, Homeland Security and Justice Issues: 

Signed by: 

David J. Wise: 
Director, Physical Infrastructure Issues: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: 

Congress directed us, in the explanatory statement accompanying the 
2009 Omnibus Appropriations Act, to review the J. Edgar Hoover 
Building (Hoover Building)--the main headquarters building for the 
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)--and the FBI's off-site 
locations (annexes), which support headquarters and are dispersed 
throughout the National Capital Region.[Footnote 71] We conducted our 
review to examine (1) the extent to which the Hoover Building and 
annexes support the FBI's operational requirements for security, 
space, and building condition and (2) the extent to which the FBI and 
the General Services Administration (GSA) have followed leading 
capital decision-making practices in identifying alternatives for 
meeting the FBI's operational requirements and the extent to which 
each alternative would address these requirements. 

To determine the extent to which the Hoover Building and annexes 
support the FBI's operational requirements for security, space, and 
building condition, we visited the Hoover Building and five annexes. 
We selected the five annexes to represent different facility security 
levels (FSL); different FBI divisions, such as Cyber and 
Counterterrorism; and varying degrees of staff fragmentation. While 
visiting these annexes, we examined security, space, and building 
condition issues firsthand and interviewed on-site program and 
security officials about the FBI's operational requirements and the 
extent to which the annexes do, or do not, meet those needs. 

For security-related issues at the five annexes, we reviewed site- 
specific facility security assessments (security assessments) that 
were conducted by either FBI security officials or the Department of 
Homeland Security's Federal Protective Service (FPS) in relation to 
Interagency Security Committee (ISC) security standards that are 
applicable to owned and leased federal buildings. We also discussed 
with FBI officials the extent to which countermeasures recommended in 
those security assessments had been implemented. In our July 2011 law 
enforcement sensitive report, we recommended that the FBI conduct a 
new security assessment in accordance with updated security standards 
issued in 2010. In response to our recommendation, the FBI conducted 
such an assessment, which we also reviewed. 

During our site visits, we interviewed FBI security officials about 
the security assessments, security risks and challenges, and actual 
security incidents or breaches at each facility. We also asked FBI 
officials whether any security challenges at the annexes were a direct 
result of operations not being colocated at the Hoover Building. To 
learn more about security issues at the Hoover Building, we toured the 
building while FBI officials reported on security vulnerabilities and 
some countermeasure improvements that had been implemented, and we 
interviewed FBI security, police, and facilities officials with 
knowledge of these improvements. 

In addition, we interviewed FBI security and facility officials about 
outstanding security projects to determine why they had not been 
implemented. To identify these projects, we reviewed FBI, FPS, GSA, 
and National Capital Planning Commission documents, including the 
FBI's 2002 security assessment of the Hoover Building, as well as 
numerous FBI and GSA planning studies that identified security 
requirements for the building. We interviewed FPS security officials 
about the security standards for federal facilities, both past and 
present, and the FSL determination process. We reviewed FPS's 2000 
Policy Handbook and the ISC standards from 2004 and 2010. Furthermore, 
we reviewed and analyzed GSA's design standards related to security. 
[Footnote 72] In addition, we relied on internal security experts from 
GAO's Office of Security and Forensic Audits and Investigative Service 
to verify security assumptions and requirements. 

For space-related issues, we reviewed the size and location of current 
facilities and programs; reviewed FBI and GSA reports that tracked 
annex leases, space use, and the Hoover Building's efficiency (how 
much of its space is usable for mission needs) and how the existing 
space does, or does not, meet the FBI's operational needs; and 
interviewed FBI program officials to understand the effects on 
operations of having different programs housed in several annexes. We 
reviewed FBI and GSA planning studies that identified which FBI 
programs or functions should be colocated. We compared attributes of 
the Hoover Building, such as its efficiency, to GSA standards and 
compared the Hoover Building to other agency headquarters in the 
National Capital Region. We asked FBI officials about the systems they 
use to manage their real property data and how frequently they update 
their leasing and space planning data. We used GSA's asset business 
plans to cross check the real property data reported to us by the FBI 
to ensure reasonable consistency in the facility data, such as the 
ownership status and size (i.e., square footage) of facilities. 
Furthermore, we reviewed and analyzed GSA's design standards related 
to building efficiency and space planning. 

For building condition issues, we analyzed assessments of the Hoover 
Building's physical condition and compared this information to GSA 
policies for building condition. We also asked GSA how often it 
conducts facility condition assessments of owned buildings. We 
examined GSA's asset business plan and other studies of the Hoover 
Building to identify completed maintenance projects, deferred 
maintenance, and planned major repair and recapitalization projects. 
We also asked FBI and GSA officials about their assessments of the 
Hoover Building's condition. 

To determine the extent to which the FBI and GSA have followed leading 
capital decision-making practices in identifying alternatives for 
meeting the FBI's operational requirements, we compared the FBI's and 
GSA's planning actions against leading practices we have reported on 
in this area.[Footnote 73] In addition, we reviewed FBI and GSA 
studies of the FBI's facilities and operational requirements, 
identified the alternatives discussed in these studies for meeting the 
requirements, and reviewed relevant laws relating to real property. We 
determined that the alternatives fell into three broad categories, 
each of which included a number of variations. For our analysis, we 
focused on the categories, since the appropriateness of the variations 
could not be determined without further study and would depend on site-
specific conditions. We then assessed the extent to which each 
alternative would address the FBI's security, space, and building 
condition requirements.[Footnote 74] 

We did not independently analyze the FBI's requirements for security, 
which are based on its assessments of the threats it faces and their 
probability of occurrence; its requirements for space, which are based 
on its projections of each FBI program's future staffing and space 
needs; or the FBI's process for deciding which programs need to be 
colocated at a single location. In our view, such analyses were 
outside the scope of our review and would require extensive reviews of 
classified intelligence on threats and hostile groups, as well as of 
programmatic mission justifications for FBI branches and their 
associated staffing levels. We did, however, determine that the FBI 
senior leadership was involved in deciding which FBI programs should 
be colocated. Furthermore, because the FBI and GSA are still in the 
early stages of the facility planning process and have not yet 
prepared final cost estimates for the Office of Management and Budget 
(OMB), we did not validate preliminary cost estimates for new 
construction or past cost estimates for modernizing or redeveloping 
the Hoover Building and site. 

We conducted this performance audit from July 2010 to November 2011 in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. 
Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain 
sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe 
that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: FBI and GSA Studies Related to FBI Headquarters Planning: 

This appendix provides summary information about eight studies that 
provide information on the condition of the Hoover Building and the 
FBI's facility needs. The studies, issued from 2001 through 2010, are 
presented in chronological order. 

1. Condition assessment, 2001: 

In 2001, a facility engineering consultant conducted a facility 
condition assessment for GSA of the Hoover Building and identified 
numerous building deficiencies including deferred maintenance and life-
cycle replacement projects. The study concluded the building was in 
poor condition. The contractor prepared three funding scenarios to 
provide GSA with insight into how the condition of the building would 
be affected based on various investment assumptions over 20 years. One 
scenario included improving the building condition to an industry- 
acceptable level. 

2. Security assessment, 2002: 

In 2002, the FBI conducted a security assessment of the building, and 
with the assistance of two consultants, identified recommendations to 
further improve the building's security. 

3. Headquarters housing strategy, 2005: 

In 2005, a real estate services consultant contracted by GSA studied 
the FBI's facility needs. According to the consultant, the FBI's 
mission was impaired by a fragmented headquarters organization that 
caused staff to be dispersed across the Hoover Building and 16 annexes 
at that time in the National Capital Region. In addition, the 
consultant documented space inefficiencies in the Hoover Building. To 
address these deficiencies, the consultant developed a strategic 
housing plan and facility requirements for FBI headquarters. These 
requirements included: 

* meeting ISC security standards, 

* making maximum use of open-plan office space, 

* providing enough secure space for handling classified information, 

* planning building systems to support current and future information 
technology needs, and: 

* providing extensive emergency backup power as well as state-of-the- 
art air filtration systems. 

The consultant developed three consolidation alternatives[Footnote 75] 
for addressing identified deficiencies and meeting the FBI's 
headquarters facility needs based on projected 2011 staffing levels: 
[Footnote 76] 

* one-site consolidation with both headquarters national security and 
law enforcement located together; 

* two-site consolidation (option A) with national security functions 
at one site and law enforcement functions at a second site; and: 

* two-site consolidation (option B) with a more even distribution of 
FBI headquarters elements (compared to option A) and no split between 
national security and law enforcement functions. 

A preliminary financial analysis, which estimated the net present 
value of savings for each alternative over 30 years, showed that each 
alternative was more economically beneficial than the status quo. The 
savings were largely due to the planned consolidation of 3.1 million 
rentable square feet into 2.3 million rentable square feet.[Footnote 
77] 

According to a draft timeline, it would take nearly 3 years for GSA to 
complete its analysis, develop a project prospectus for congressional 
authorization, and identify a site. Another 3 years was estimated for 
design, construction, and move-in. 

Citing detailed cost estimates for a project of similar size for 
another intelligence agency, the consultant predicted a total project 
cost of over $1.5 billion. 

4. Site study, 2006: 

In 2006, another real estate services consultant hired by GSA studied 
a range of scenarios for use of the Hoover Building and site. This 
study was intended to inform GSA management decisions on optimizing 
the value of the Hoover Building as a GSA real property asset and was 
not necessarily performed to identify alternatives for meeting the 
FBI's headquarters facility needs. The study did, however, consider 
the impact on operations if the FBI remained as the building tenant. 
The consultant identified five scenarios: 

* maintain and operate the building "as is," 

* vacate the building and sell the asset, 

* modernize the building,[Footnote 78] 

* vacate and demolish the building and redevelop the site,[Footnote 
79] and: 

* partially demolish the building to redevelop the front side facing 
Pennsylvania Avenue and renovate the back portion that faces E Street. 
[Footnote 80] 

Estimated costs to modernize the Hoover Building ranged from $850 
million to $1.1 billion. Estimated costs to demolish the Hoover 
Building and redevelop the site ranged from $853 million to $1.4 
billion.[Footnote 81] 

The study concluded that no alternative was a definite best option for 
GSA. 

The study reported that a modernization, in general, would not improve 
the building's gross and rentable square footage. In addition, this 
alternative would create a demand for swing space and could adversely 
affect the FBI's operations if the FBI remained as the building's 
tenant during the modernization. According to the study, the 
modernization would be least costly if the FBI vacated the entire 
building to give the construction contractor unrestricted access. 

According to the study, redeveloping the site with a new building or 
buildings would not meet GSA's required rate of return on investment, 
and constructing a new secure facility would sacrifice tremendous 
value associated with a highly marketable location. 

5. Space study, 2007: 

In 2007, GSA hired an architectural design and planning consultant to 
assess the condition of the Hoover Building and determine the extent 
to which it supports the FBI's mission. The consultant assessed the 
Hoover Building's design and use of space against industry standards 
and compared the Hoover Building to facilities used by other 
intelligence agencies. 

According to the report, the FBI's work process is dynamic, requiring 
intelligence gathered by one team to be shared with multiple teams for 
whom the intelligence may also be relevant. To respond to the FBI's 
work process and mission, the consultant determined that the FBI's 
workplace should promote collaboration and communication among staff 
and be easily reconfigured. The study found that the Hoover Building 
does not generally meet these criteria because of its structural 
characteristics and inherent inefficiencies. For example, the study 
found that aspects of the building--including the location of 
structural elements and hard wall partitions--result in an inherently 
inefficient use of space. According to the consultant, these 
characteristics limit the degree to which the FBI can reconfigure 
space to optimize its operations and respond to mission changes. The 
consultant concluded that the Hoover Building is a significant barrier 
to the FBI's performance and operational effectiveness and no longer 
effectively supports the FBI's mission. 

The consultant also indicated that the renovations necessary to make 
the Hoover Building viable, feasible, and desirable may be 
unjustifiable given the costs and disruption they would entail. The 
consultant concluded that relocating the FBI to a new facility would 
likely lead to a significant improvement in performance at a lower 
cost. 

6. Real estate appraisal, 2008: 

In 2008, GSA hired a real estate appraisal firm to develop a market- 
value opinion of the Hoover Building and site to inform GSA's asset 
management strategy. The appraisal firm considered three valuation 
approaches: (1) a cost approach; (2) a sales comparison approach; and 
(3) an income capitalization approach.[Footnote 82] 

The appraisal firm described the construction quality of the existing 
building as average and the condition of the building as below 
average. It also found the building inferior to other office buildings 
constructed during the same period. In particular, the consultant 
reported the building windows are very small compared to modern office 
building windows and that larger windows are generally required to 
attract tenants to higher-priced leased space. The firm reported that 
GSA had estimated a cost of over $200 million to modify the structure 
and replace its windows. 

GSA provided the appraisal firm with a list of planned 
recapitalization projects totaling over $460 million, to be 
implemented over 10 years; however, the appraiser reported that GSA's 
Property Manager had indicated that, for lack of funds, none of the 
planned capital expenditures would likely be made. Therefore, the 
appraiser did not consider the value of any planned recapitalization 
projects in the estimated value. However, the appraiser reported that 
even if the planned capital expenditures were made, the Hoover 
Building would not be considered a Class A office building.[Footnote 
83] 

The appraiser reported that the site was zoned to permit retail, 
office, housing, mixed, and public uses, and the appraiser concluded 
that no reasonably probable use of the site would be likely to 
generate a higher value than office use. Accordingly, the appraiser 
identified office use, developed to the level permitted by the zoning, 
as the highest and best use of the property. 

The appraiser reported that the site, if redeveloped, could 
accommodate a building area of approximately 2.5 million gross square 
feet based on the current zoning regulations. The appraiser also noted 
that the existing Hoover Building is 2.4 million gross square feet and 
therefore a building on the redevelopment site would likely be similar 
in size. The appraiser noted that the existing building is set back 
farther from Pennsylvania Avenue greater than is typical for a 
commercial office building downtown but not far enough where 
demolishing the building to capture the space would be cost-effective. 
Redevelopment would enable a developer to construct a new Class A 
office building. 

7. Relocation study, 2009: 

In 2009, the FBI contracted with an architectural and planning firm to 
develop a housing plan, space requirements program, and conceptual 
site plans for consolidating its headquarters in a new facility onto a 
single site. While the 2005 GSA study examined space requirements at a 
macro level, it did not provide a detailed housing plan and space 
requirements program. Thus, to more fully define its requirements, the 
FBI established goals for the 2009 study. These goals were to: 

* develop a housing plan that identified the FBI branches and 
divisions to be located on-site; 

* summarize staffing levels by branch and division, including both FBI 
personnel and contractors; 

* summarize future staffing growth factors; 

* develop space-planning standards and workspace types; 

* develop a space requirements program for branches and divisions 
based on those staffing and space standards; 

* identify required adjacencies; 

* outline common shared support spaces and special space requirements; 

* recommend an ideal floor plate size for a new building that would 
maximize future flexibility; 

* identify circulation factors for the building; 

* calculate total gross and usable square footage of a new facility; 

* develop conceptual site plans; and: 

* identify design criteria, including Leadership in Energy and 
Environmental Design, security, and building code requirements. 

The consultant collected data by walking through the FBI's 
headquarters spaces, using a space requirements questionnaire, and 
interviewing FBI personnel in the facilities, security, and 
information technology groups to verify information from the 
questionnaire. Each FBI branch and division reviewed the consultant's 
data. 

Using FBI personnel counts from 2008 with projections for future 
growth through 2013 and 2018, the consultant derived overall square 
footage tabulations. FBI's Resource Planning Office provided the 
personnel counts and growth projections. 

Based on the space and security requirements for the main headquarters 
building, the consultant developed planning estimates for the site 
acreage required. 

The consultant developed two site concepts: (1) a suburban office 
campus and (2) a more urban site located near the Washington beltway. 
Preliminary cost estimates for a new headquarters were developed based 
on the consultant's analyses of space and security requirements. FBI 
costs for special security equipment, communications and information 
systems, modular systems furniture, and moving were not included in 
the construction-related costs but were separately estimated and are 
not considered GSA project costs. 

Land costs were estimated on the basis of comparable land sales over 
the past several years in a variety of locations inside and outside 
the beltway. The suburban and beltway property costs were each 
averaged to determine average expected prices. The land costs were 
added to the GSA project cost summary and increased by 10 percent to 
reflect potential increases in land value, which may occur before a 
property is acquired. 

The study identified a need for a headquarters facility containing an 
estimated 2.6 million gross square feet--including 2.1 million usable 
square feet--to house nearly 11,600 personnel. Required site sizes 
were estimated at between 55 and 65 acres based on zoning assumptions 
for suburban and more urban locations. 

8. Consolidation report (Final Draft), 2010: 

In 2010, the FBI's Facilities and Logistic Services Division prepared 
an executive-level report to summarize past FBI and GSA findings and 
conclusions about the Hoover Building and both agencies' studies of 
the need for a new headquarters facility. The report was intended to 
update FBI leadership on the current headquarters planning, costs, and 
recommendations prior to discussions with GSA and OMB. The report 
outlines a range of acquisition strategies that GSA and the FBI could 
use to acquire a new consolidated headquarters and identifies the 
FBI's preferred strategy. 

According to the report, the FBI's mission-critical headquarters 
operations are dispersed in 22 separate locations including the Hoover 
Building, up from 17 when GSA first studied the issue in 2005. Citing 
space and staffing requirements, the report identifies the need for a 
facility with 2.5 million gross square feet, 2.2 million rentable 
square feet, and 1.9 million usable square feet to house an estimated 
11,500 personnel. The report further anticipates a reduction of 
approximately 873,400 rentable square feet when the 22 current 
locations are consolidated, as well as an estimated annual savings of 
at least $30 million in leased housing costs. 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: Financing Strategies Available for Capital Projects: 

This appendix describes potential financing strategies that may be 
considered in acquiring a new headquarters for the FBI. 

Federal Construction Using the Federal Buildings Fund: 

* Construction or modernization is funded through GSA's Federal 
Buildings Fund (FBF). 

* We have previously reported that although ownership through federal 
construction is often the most cost-effective option,[Footnote 84] 
pursuant to budget scoring rules, the full cost of construction of a 
capital project is recorded up front in the budget. 

* The FBF is the primary means of financing the operating and capital 
costs associated with federal space owned or managed by GSA. GSA's 
Public Buildings Service charges federal agencies rent, the receipts 
of which are deposited in the FBF. Congress exercises control over the 
FBF through the annual appropriations process, setting annual limits 
on how much of the fund can be used for various activities. In 
addition, Congress may appropriate additional amounts for the FBF. 
Among the activities the FBF is used for are new construction, 
building repairs and alterations, building operations, and rental of 
space. 

Lease of Federal Site to a Developer Who Constructs a Facility On-site 
and Leases It Back to the Government (i.e., Ground Lease and 
Leaseback): 

* GSA officials report that lease construction by a developer could be 
pursued using GSA real property authorities in 40 U.S.C. § 585(c) or 
Section 412 of Public Law 108-447 (hereafter referred to as Section 
412).[Footnote 85] 

* 40 U.S.C. § 585(c) authorizes GSA to lease federal property--for not 
more than 30 years--to a developer who would build a facility on a 
site owned by the government and lease it back to GSA. The title to 
the parcel never leaves government ownership, and at the expiration of 
the lease, the title to the building passes to the United States. 

* Section 412 provides GSA with new, additional authorities to dispose 
of and use its real property inventory by sale, lease, exchange, and 
leaseback arrangements. Section 412 does not specify any limit on the 
term of the lease. 

* According to GSA, it has attempted to use 40 U.S.C. § 585(c) only 
once as a development authority, and it ultimately did not complete 
the project using this authority. GSA has never used Section 412 as a 
development authority. 

* Section 412 also authorizes GSA to retain the net proceeds from its 
real property disposals. Section 412 might enable GSA to use the 
proceeds of a sale--if the existing Hoover Building or site were sold--
to pay for some of a new project's costs. 

* How a leaseback is structured will determine how it is scored, and 
it may be treated as a capital lease with the amount equal to the 
asset cost recorded up front in the budget.[Footnote 86] 

* Given the current budgetary environment, this type of arrangement 
may be more feasible now than in the past. Furthermore, even though 
GSA told us that it almost always recommends the traditional funding 
strategy--federal construction--it has said that in the current 
budgetary environment, it believes that alternative strategies such as 
a ground lease and leaseback arrangement may need to be considered. 

* FBI officials believe that if a ground lease and leaseback 
arrangement were to be pursued, the agency may be able to move into a 
new consolidated facility 2 or 3 years earlier than it could with a 
direct federal appropriation for design and construction, given the 
demands on the FBF. 

Lease Construction (i.e., Leasing): 

* The government acquires space through an operating lease. 

* The government has no ownership of the land or the facility at any 
time. 

* We have previously reported that operating leases tend to be the 
most expensive approach to meeting long-term federal space needs and 
that over the last decade, GSA has relied heavily on operating leases 
to meet new long-term needs because it lacks funds to pursue 
ownership.[Footnote 87] GSA currently leases more space than it owns. 

Use of this approach has grown because only the annual lease payment 
needs to be recorded in GSA's budget request, reducing the up-front 
funding commitment but generally costing the federal government more 
over time. 

[End of section] 

Appendix IV: Comments from the Federal Bureau of Investigation: 

U.S. Department of Justice: 
Federal Bureau of Investigation: 
Washington, D.C. 20535-0001: 

June 30, 2011: 

Mr. David C. Maurer: 
Director, Homeland Security and Justice: 
United States Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, Northwest: 
Washington, D.C. 20548:  

Mr. David J. Wise: 
Director, Physical Infrastructure: 
United States Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, Northwest: 
Washington, D.C. 20548:  

Dear Messrs. Maurer and Wise:  

The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) appreciates the opportunity 
to review and respond to your draft report [Redacted]. 

The Report presents factual information on the poor physical condition 
and security shortcomings of the J. Edgar Hoover FBI Building and the 
numerous FBI headquarters offsite locations. However, the operational 
impact of a fragmented workforce located at multiple sites across a 
wide geographic area is the FBI's primary concern and is the driving 
force behind our urgency of finding a long term resolution to this 
situation.  

The FBI headquarters today is dispersed in over 40 separate locations 
including 22 locations in the National Capital Region which need to be 
consolidated into a central headquarters facility. The J. Edgar Hoover 
FBI Building, which has exceeded its capacity, houses just 52% of 
headquarters staff with the remainder at 21 off-site leased locations. 
This dispersion has created significant challenges with regard to 
effectively managing the Bureau's headquarters' divisions and offices, 
facilitating organizational change, sharing information and 
collaboration across operational and administrative functions.  

The FBI's current headquarters housing is both inefficient and 
expensive. The inadequate design of the J. Edgar Hoover Building does 
not support an agile workforce in the 21st Century. This poor design 
coupled with the redundancies and the inefficiency associated with 22 
separate locations, 3,092,654 Rentable Square Feet (RSF), costing over 
$170 million annually in rent and operating expenses support the need 
for a new FBI Headquarters. [Redacted] 

Our analysis and recently commissioned outside study indicates what 
efficiencies gained from consolidation and an "open office" design 
plan, overall required square footage to house the FBI headquarters 
could be reduced by almost 900,000 RSF, with estimated savings to the 
US Government of $47-$59 million annually.  

The FBI cannot afford to continue the status quo. from an operational 
effectiveness or a fiscal stewardship perspective. A new consolidated 
FBI headquarters facility is urgently needed and we view this as one 
of our highest priorities for the foreseeable future. 

In conclusion, the efforts of the GAO in completing this Report are 
greatly appreciated. Upon review of the Report, the FBI concurs with 
the two recommendations directed to the FBI. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 
T. J. Harrington: 
Associate Deputy Director: 

[End of section] 

Appendix V: Comments from the General Services Administration: 

GSA: 
The Administrator: 
U.S. General Services Administration: 
1275 First Street, NE: 
Washington, DC 20417: 
Telephone: (292) 501-0300: 
Fax: (202) 219-1243:  

June 27, 2011: 

The Honorable Gene L. Dodaro: 
Comptroller General of the United States: 
Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548:  

Dear Mr. Dodaro:  

The U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) appreciates the 
opportunity to comment on the draft U.S. Government Accountability 
Office (GAO) report [Redacted]. In addition to recommendations made to 
the Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation 
(FBI), the report recommends that the Commissioner of the Public 
Buildings Service take the following action:  

Evaluate GSA's current strategy to minimize major repair and 
recapitalization investments and take action to address any facility 
condition issues that could put FBI operations at risk and lead to 
further deterioration of the building that could affect continued use 
of the Hoover Building by the FBI or any future tenant.  

GSA is taking appropriate action to implement this recommendation. We 
give priority to both life safety projects and other work necessary to 
maintain tenancy in the building. GSA remains committed to making all 
necessary investments to ensure ongoing operations until a long-term 
solution for FBI can be developed. In addition, enclosed are technical 
comments that update and clarify statements in the draft report.  

If you have any additional questions or concerns, please do not 
hesitate to contact me or Mr. Robert A. Peck, Commissioner, Public 
Buildings Service. Mr. Peck can be reached at (202) 501-1100. Staff 
inquiries may be directed to Mr. Flavio Peres, Deputy Assistant 
Commissioner for Portfolio Management. Mr. Peres can be reached at 
(202) 208-1280.  

Sincerely,  

Signed by: 

Martha Johnson: 
Administrator:  

Enclosure: 

[End of letter]   

GAO Draft Report for Agency Comment GSA Technical Comments 6.14.11: 

[Redacted paragraph] 

Page 20: 
Reference: "Although the Hoover Building is nearing its life-cycle age 
and exhibiting signs of deterioration, GSA has decided to limit major 
repair and recapitalization investments to those systems or components 
that affect life safety and building functionality until it is 
determined whether the FBI will remain a long-term occupant of the 
building." 

Comment: GSA has made appropriate mid-term investments to ensure FBI 
operations aren't at risk and remains committed to making all 
necessary investments to ensure ongoing operations until a long-term 
solution can be developed. This strategy provides for maintaining the 
asset as functional for the FBI's headquarters, reducing conditions 
that put FBI operations at risk, and addressing life safety issues. 

Page 22: 
Reference: "GSA's decision to limit major repair and recapitalization 
investments is inconsistent with its categorization of the Hoover 
Building in its asset business plan as a "core asset." GSA core assets 
generally have a long-term holding period of at least 15 years. For 
buildings with a long-term holding period, GSA policy states that 
reinvestment will be funded to ensure maintenance of the building's 
quality and condition at levels appropriate to meet continuing mission 
and customer needs. This includes all preventative maintenance, 
necessary upgrades, and enhancements to the building and its systems 
to maintain the asset in appropriate condition. GSA's near-term 
maintenance policy for the Hoover Building is more consistent with 
GSA's policy for a "transition" asset. A transition asset typically 
has a 6- to 15-year holding period as its tenant prepares for 
relocation to a new federal building or a leased building. For such an 
asset, GSA funds projects that meet basic needs in transition, but 
avoids any major reinvestment. According to GSA officials, the Hoover 
Building's categorization could change as they continue to study the 
FBI's needs and the building's potential for reuse by another agency 
should the FBI relocate to a new facility. While the categorization of 
the Hoover Building as a core asset could change, the building will 
likely be used for several more years, and its large backlog of 
deferred maintenance, major repairs, and recapitalization requirements 
increases the potential for systems or components to fail and 
potentially disrupt FBI operations." 

Comment: During the course of its recent review of this asset, GSA has 
changed the portfolio segment category of the Hoover building to 
"Transition" to reflect FBI's determination that the building is 
functionally obsolete for their purposes. This change more accurately 
reflects the asset's recent investment strategy. However, this 
categorization may change depending on the prospect of FBI vacating 
the building and/or further study of the asset. 

[End of section] 

Appendix VI: Comments from the Department of Homeland Security: 

U.S. Department of Homeland Security: 
Washington, DC 20528: 

June 23, 2011: 

Mr. David C. Maurer: 
Director: 
Homeland Security and Justice: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, NW: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Re: Draft Report [Redacted] 

Dear Mr. Maurer: 

Thank you for the opportunity to review and comment on this draft 
report. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) appreciates the 
U.S. Government Accountability Office's (GAO's) work in planning and 
conducting its review and issuing this report. 

The Department is pleased to note the report's positive acknowledgment 
of the DHS role as Chair of the Interagency Security Committee (ISC), 
tasked in part with developing baseline facility security standards 
and coordinating federal agencies' facility protection efforts. The 
report also recognizes the role of DHS's Federal Protective Service 
(FPS) in conducting periodic security assessments of federal buildings 
such as the Federal Bureau of Investigation's (FBI's) Hoover Building. 

Although the report does not contain any recommendations specifically 
directed at DHS, the Department remains committed to continuing its 
work with interagency partners, such as the FBI and the General 
Services Administration, to identify and mitigate security-related 
vulnerabilities at federal facilities, as appropriate. For example, 
FPS is prepared to assist the FBI in updating the Hoover Building's 
security assessment using the 2010 ISC standard, if called upon to do 
so. 

Again, thank you for the opportunity to review and comment on this 
draft report. We look forward to working with you on future homeland 
security issues. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Jim H. Crumpacker: 
Director: 
Departmental GAO/OIG Liaison Office: 

[End of section] 

Appendix VII: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contacts: 

David C. Maurer, Director, Homeland Security and Justice Issues, (202) 
512-9627 or maurerd@gao.gov: 

David J. Wise, Director, Physical Infrastructure Issues, (202) 512-
2834 or wised@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the individuals named above, Michael Armes, Assistant 
Director; Sandra Burrell, Assistant Director; John Bauckman, Analyst- 
in-Charge; Kevin Craw; Daniel Hoy; Bess Eisenstadt; Susan Michal-
Smith; Linda Miller; Sara Ann Moessbauer; Joshua Ormond; Thomas 
Predmore; and Janet Temko made key contributions to this report. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] Explanatory statement in the 2009 Committee Print of the House 
Committee on Appropriations on H.R. 1105, at 1764 accompanying the 
2009 Omnibus Appropriations Act, Pub. L. No. 111-8, Div. B, Title II, 
123 Stat. 524, 574 (2009). 

[2] GAO has reported that buildings require adequate maintenance, 
repair, and recapitalization--replacing systems at the end of their 
useful life--to keep them in good condition. See GAO, Federal Real 
Property: Government's Fiscal Exposure from Repair and Maintenance 
Backlogs Is Unclear, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-10] (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 16, 
2008). 

[3] An asset business plan is a repository for critical facts about a 
GSA asset and is used to guide business decisions and to track the 
asset's financial performance and progress toward mandated building 
performance criteria. 

[4] Since 1994, GSA has delegated routine maintenance and operations 
authority for the Hoover Building to the FBI, but GSA retains 
responsibility for major capital repair and replacement projects in 
the building. One of GSA's objectives as the government's real 
property steward is that the physical condition of federal buildings 
will be maintained to reflect market standards. In general, the 
responsibility for maintenance and repair of the annexes resides with 
the building landlord, and therefore we did not assess the physical 
condition of annex spaces. 

[5] Our assessment was based on past GAO work, including Executive 
Guide: Leading Practices in Capital Decision-Making, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/AIMD-99-32] (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 1, 
1998); Public-Private Partnerships: Factors to Consider When 
Deliberating Governmental Use as a Real Property Management Tool, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-02-46T] (Washington, D.C.: 
Oct. 1, 2001); and Budget Issues: Alternative Approaches to Finance 
Federal Capital, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-03-1011] 
(Washington, D.C.: Aug. 21, 2003). 

[6] This moat is a trench that helps to limit how close pedestrians 
and vehicles can get to the building and directs access to specific 
entry points. 

[7] Staff counts include both federal and contractor positions. 

[8] A few FBI headquarters annexes are located outside the National 
Capital Region. 

[9] The other FBI annexes that are not proposed to be colocated house 
functions such as warehousing, records management, continuity of 
operations, and a van shop. 

[10] Following the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah federal building in 
Oklahoma City, Executive Order 12977 was issued and called for the 
creation of an interagency security committee to address the quality 
and effectiveness of physical security requirements for federal 
facilities by developing and evaluating security standards. 

[11] ISC, "2004 ISC standards" (Washington, D.C.: 2004). 

[12] ISC, "2010 ISC standards" (Washington, D.C.: 2010). 

[13] The ISC released its 2010 standards as an interim standard with a 
24-month validation period. The validation period is intended to allow 
for user input to inform the final standard. 

[14] In those instances, the facilities were constructed on a 
Department of Defense site in Quantico, Virginia. 

[15] 40 U.S.C. § 584 provides that the Administrator of General 
Services may assign or reassign space for an executive agency in any 
federally owned or leased building after consultation with the head of 
the affected agency and a determination by the Administrator that the 
assignment or reassignment is advantageous to the government in terms 
of economy, efficiency, or national security. 

[16] The fiscal year 2011 threshold for proposed new construction, 
alterations, and leases was $2.79 million. 

[17] A prospectus is a document containing project and cost 
information that GSA submits to the Office of Management and Budget 
and Congress for approval as part of the authorization process for new 
construction or leasing projects. 

[18] The FBF is a revolving fund managed by GSA that finances--from 
rent charged to occupants of GSA-controlled space--real property 
management and related activities of GSA's Public Buildings Service. 
Principal activities include the operation, maintenance, and repair of 
GSA-owned and -leased buildings and the construction of new federal 
facilities. The FBF also provides for the rental of space in privately 
owned buildings. In this report, we refer to property that is owned by 
the federal government and under the control and custody of GSA as GSA-
owned property. 

[19] If an agency enters into a lease with a private building owner or 
through another federal agency, the agency would pay rent directly to 
one of those entities and not to GSA. 

[20] Under a sale-leaseback arrangement, a federal agency sells an 
asset and then leases back some or all of the asset from the purchaser. 

[21] Under a ground lease and leaseback arrangement, a federal site is 
leased to a developer and a facility is constructed to government 
specifications and leased back to the government. The title to the 
parcel never leaves government ownership. At the expiration of the 
lease, the title to the building passes to the United States. 

[22] 40 U.S.C. § 585(c) authorizes GSA to lease a federal site to a 
developer and then pay rent for space, for a period of not more than 
30 years, in buildings erected on land owned by the government. Also, 
Section 412 of Pub. L. No. 108-447 118, Stat. 2809, 3259, enacted in 
2004, provides GSA with additional authority to dispose of and use its 
real property by various means, including leaseback arrangements. 

[23] GAO, Federal Buildings: Funding Repairs and Alterations Has Been 
a Challenge--Expanded Financing Tools Needed, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-01-452] (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 12, 
2001). 

[24] GAO, Public-Private Partnerships: Pilot Program Needed to 
Demonstrate the Actual Benefits of Using Partnerships, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-01-906] (Washington, D.C.: July 25, 
2001). In addition, Congress may also appropriate moneys from the 
General Fund of the Treasury to the FBF as it deems necessary. 

[25] GAO, Federal Real Property: Reliance on Costly Leasing to Meet 
New Space Needs Is an Ongoing Problem, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-136T] (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 6, 
2005). 

[26] Our previously issued law enforcement sensitive report contains 
additional information on the security posture of the Hoover Building 
and the FBI's security requirements. 

[27] We have previously reported on the challenges associated with 
protecting leased space in facilities with nonfederal tenants, such as 
the lack of control over common areas like building lobbies and 
elevators.This lack of control stems, in part, from the inability of 
federal tenants to negotiate changes to those areas, such as the 
installation of X-ray machines, because private landlords frequently 
believe that such countermeasures would inconvenience other tenants 
and the public. See GAO, Building Security: New Federal Standards Hold 
Promise, But Could Be Strengthened to Better Protect Leased Space, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-873] (Washington, D.C.: 
Sept. 22, 2010). 

[28] GAO, Homeland Security: Further Actions Needed to Coordinate 
Federal Agencies' Facility Protection Efforts and Promote Key 
Practices, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-49] 
(Washington, D.C.: Nov. 30, 2004). 

[29] GAO, Homeland Security: Greater Attention to Key Practices Would 
Improve the Federal Protective Service's Approach to Facility 
Protection, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-142] 
(Washington, D.C.: Oct. 23, 2009). 

[30] For those FBI annexes under the control or custody of GSA, the 
extent to which FPS assesses the security of the building depends on 
whether the FBI is the sole tenant or one of several federal tenants. 
In cases where the FBI is the sole tenant in the facility, the FBI 
usually signs a waiver stating that the FBI is responsible for 
conducting its own assessments. FPS officials stated that for 
multitenant buildings, FPS normally assesses the security of the 
facility's exterior and the common areas within the building, but does 
not enter the office space in which the FBI conducts its operations. 

[31] See footnote 13. 

[32] Usable square footage is space that is generally assignable for 
the tenant's use, such as office space, conference rooms that are not 
shared, computer server rooms, and tenant storage areas. It does not 
include nonassignable space, such as vertical ducts and public 
elevators and stairs. 

[33] GSA, "Space study" (unpublished study, 2007). 

[34] GSA, "Real estate appraisal" (unpublished opinion, 2008). 

[35] A floor plate refers to the entirety of the floor layout, 
including both the usable space and the nonassignable space. The 
design of the nonassignable space and the size of the building 
elements within that space, such as elevators and stairs, influence 
the space efficiency of the building. 

[36] GSA, Facilities Standards for the Public Buildings Service 
(November 2010). 

[37] GSA defines space efficiency as the minimum necessary space for 
an agency's desired functions to be properly accommodated, with 
minimum "waste" between usable area and gross area. 

[38] GSA, "Building evaluation" (unpublished study, 2011). 

[39] In 2007, the Commission of Fine Arts requested that GSA revise 
the proposed design to address the commission's concerns about 
proposed architectural details. Established in 1910 by an act of 
Congress, the commission reviews and approves designs for buildings 
erected by the federal government in the nation's capital. 

[40] GSA, "Space study" (2007). 

[41] FBI space-programming studies show that if the FBI were to 
consolidate into more efficient, modern space, it would need 
approximately 2.2 million rentable square feet compared with the 3.1 
million rentable square feet that it occupies today in the Hoover 
Building and 21 off-site annexes. 

[42] At one location we visited, where the FBI leases space from 
another intelligence agency, FBI officials identified "smart walls" 
that can easily be modified to meet new task forces' operational and 
security requirements. For example, one official said that the FBI 
transformed a conference room area into secure office space for 15 
workstations within a week. 

[43] GSA, The New Federal Workplace: A Report on the Performance of 
Six Workplace 20-20 Projects (Washington, D.C.: June 2009). 

[44] In 2004, the FBI Director proposed the establishment of a 
Facilities and Logistic Services Division to consolidate and 
standardize real property management throughout the FBI. In June 2005, 
the Attorney General approved the establishment of this division. 
Within that division, a headquarters Space Management Unit was created 
to better manage the growth in FBI headquarters space needs by 
standardizing and formalizing space assignments, allocations, and 
projections, and by coordinating new leasing actions. 

[45] The National Research Council has reported that facilities and 
their building systems--such as the electrical system--generally have 
a finite, expected useful life, over which time proper maintenance 
should occur and after which time the systems may need to be replaced. 
Most buildings are designed for a minimum service life of 30 years, 
but with proper maintenance may perform for 40 to 100 years. 

[46] In 2010, GSA awarded a maintenance contract that provides for 
routine operations and maintenance of the heating, ventilation, and 
cooling systems in the Hoover Building. 

[47] Since 2004, GSA has completed or is in the process of completing 
several recapitalization projects at the Hoover Building, including an 
$11.4 million chiller replacement, a $5 million upgrade to the 
building's electrical closets, and a $5.2 million project to install 
energy-efficient lighting. 

[48] GSA's Public Buildings Service assesses the physical condition of 
GSA assets regularly through the use of a physical condition survey. 
Every 2 years, a team of Public Buildings Service associates, 
including the asset manager and the property manager, physically 
inspect a building to assess its current condition and needs and to 
document changes in condition over time using a series of questions 
contained in the survey. 

[49] GSA plans to treat the building's concrete façade with a chemical 
consolidant to make it less porous and thus less susceptible to 
deterioration. 

[50] GSA, "Asset Business Plan for the J. Edgar Hoover Building" 
(unpublished plan, May 24, 2010). 

[51] GSA, "FY10 Asset Management Plan" (unpublished plan, 2010). 

[52] See [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/AIMD-99-32]. We 
developed our leading practices for use in conjunction with the Office 
of Management and Budget's Capital Programming Guide, a supplement to 
its Circular A-11, which provides detailed guidance to federal 
agencies on planning, budgeting, acquiring, and managing capital 
assets. 

[53] As we discussed earlier in this report, the FBI updated its 
security assessment of the Hoover Building in 2011. 

[54] Executive Order 13327, Federal Real Property Asset Management, 
issued February 4, 2004, required agencies to develop and implement an 
agency asset management plan that would identify actions to be taken 
to improve the operational and financial management of the agency's 
real property inventory and give consideration to a number of real 
property issues. These issues include the (1) acquisition costs of 
real property assets; (2) operating, maintenance, and security costs 
at federal properties; (3) disposal of real property excess to 
agencies' needs; (4) opportunities for cooperative arrangements with 
the commercial real estate community; and (5) enhancement of federal 
agency productivity through an improved working environment. 

[55] According to the FBI, efforts to improve collaboration and 
communication also respond to recommendations--made to the nation's 
intelligence community--by the National Commission on Terrorist 
Attacks Upon the United States and the Commission on the Intelligence 
Capabilities of the United States Regarding Weapons of Mass 
Destruction. 

[56] GSA, "Space study" (2007). 

[57] Presidential Memorandum--Disposing of Unneeded Federal Real 
Estate (June 10, 2010). 

[58] The FBI's space standards call for an average workstation of 49 
square feet (7 feet by 7 feet). 

[59] Our review of FBI planning documents shows that the FBI 
considered using alternative workplace strategies--such as 
teleworking--to help address its space needs but determined that 
because most of its work is highly classified, teleworking is not a 
practical option and also does not support its mission need to bring 
teams together. 

[60] GSA's federal workplace goals for the next decade call for open- 
space floor plans that promote collaboration and provide greater 
flexibility to reconfigure space to meet the changing needs of 
building occupants. 

[61] GSA, "Site study" (unpublished study, 2006). 

[62] GSA, "Site study" (2006). 

[63] GSA, "FBI headquarters housing strategy" (unpublished study, 
2005); FBI, "Relocation study" (unpublished study, 2009); and FBI, 
"Consolidation report" (unpublished, final draft report, 2010). 

[64] Some alternatives included variations. For example, the 
modernization alternative included four variations that ranged from 
vacating the entire building during the renovation to renovating the 
occupied building floor by floor. 

[65] See [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/AIMD-99-32]. 

[66] The FBI would also need to identify its contributions to the 
other related project costs that are not part of the design and 
construction estimate--such as the costs of moving, systems furniture, 
and security equipment. Funding for these costs would be requested 
separately through the FBI's budget submission. 

[67] OMB Circular A-11, Part 7, "Planning, Budgeting, Acquisition, and 
Management of Capital Assets" indicates that in selecting the best 
capital asset, agencies should identify at least three viable 
alternatives in addition to a baseline representing the status quo. In 
addition, agencies should identify specific qualitative benefits, as 
well as quantitative costs and benefits, to be realized. 

[68] GSA would need to consult with OMB as to whether the disposition 
or reuse of the Hoover Building and site should be factored into the 
business case analysis. 

[69] The prospectus shall include, among other things, a brief 
description of the space, the location of the space, an estimate of 
the maximum cost to the United States, and a statement of how much the 
government is already spending to accommodate the employees who will 
occupy the space. Prospectus requirements also apply to alterations of 
public buildings. For large federal construction projects, GSA 
typically submits an initial prospectus to request authorization for 
site acquisition and design funding and a second prospectus for 
construction funding. See 40 U.S.C. § 3307. 

[70] If a facility were constructed by a developer and leased for the 
FBI's use, annual rent would be requested by the FBI in the 
appropriate budget year to coincide with its occupancy of the new 
facility. Rent is then paid to GSA and deposited into the FBF. GSA 
then pays the landlord from the FBF. 

[71] Explanatory statement in the 2009 Committee Print of the House 
Committee on Appropriations on H.R. 1105, at 1764 accompanying the 
2009 Omnibus Appropriations Act, Pub. L. No. 111-8, Div. B, Title II, 
123 Stat. 524, 574 (2009). 

[72] GSA, Facilities Standards for the Public Buildings Service 
(November 2010). 

[73] See GAO, Executive Guide: Leading Practices in Capital Decision- 
Making, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/AIMD-99-32] 
(Washington, D.C.: Dec. 1, 1998). 

[74] See [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-03-1011]. 

[75] Each of the three consolidation alternatives would provide 
approximately 2.3 million rentable square feet of space. Each of the 
three consolidation alternatives also included a small downtown 
Washington, D.C., location for elements that need to coordinate 
closely with Congress, the Department of Justice, or the White House 
as well as an administrative annex outside the downtown area. 

[76] Staffing projections assumed an annual growth rate of 5 percent 
during fiscal years 2005 through 2011. The projected fiscal year 2011 
staffing level was 9,500 personnel. In January 2011, the FBI reported 
that if a move to a consolidated campus occurred in January 2011, an 
estimated 10,000 staff--500 more than projected in 2005--would be 
relocated to the new headquarters. 

[77] To provide an equal-size comparison, the status quo baseline in 
the plan considered that GSA would acquire an additional 610,000 
rentable square feet of leased space to accommodate the FBI's 
projected growth during fiscal years 2005 through 2011. 

[78] Four variations were considered, including (1) vacating the 
building and renovating it; (2) renovating by floor; (3) renovating by 
quadrant; and (4) renovating by floor and building out the open-air 
second floor and mezzanine. 

[79] Two variations were considered, including (1) constructing a 
single secure building and (2) constructing three buildings. 

[80] The front of the Hoover Building is triangular in shape and 
includes the building's central courtyard. The concept envisioned a 
more efficient structure built on this portion of the site. 

[81] The cost estimates do not include costs for swing space to house 
personnel while construction takes place. 

[82] The cost approach assumes a buyer would pay no more for a 
property than what it would cost to construct a like property with the 
same utility. The sales comparison approach assumes a buyer would pay 
no more than what it would cost to acquire a similar existing 
property. The income capitalization approach reflects the market's 
perception of a relationship between a property's potential income and 
its market value. 

[83] The Building Owners and Management Association International 
defines Class A office buildings as the most prestigious buildings 
that compete for premier office users with rents above average for the 
area. Such buildings have high-quality standard finishes, state-of-the-
art systems, exceptional accessibility, and a definite market 
presence. Class B office buildings compete for a wide range of users 
with rents in the average range for the area. Building finishes are 
fair to good for the area, and systems are adequate. 

[84] GAO, Federal Real Property: Reliance on Costly Leasing to Meet 
New Space Needs Is an Ongoing Problem, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-136T] (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 6, 
2005). 

[85] Pub. L. No. 108-447, 118 Stat. 2809, 3259 (2004). 

[86] For more information, see OMB Circular No. A-11, Appendix B, 
"Budgetary Treatment of Lease-Purchases and Leases of Capital Assets" 
(2010). 

[87] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-136T]. 

[End of section] 

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