Douglas A. Munro Coast Guard Headquarters Building | |
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Building in 2014
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Alternative names | United States Coast Guard Headquarters Building |
General information | |
Type | Government office building |
Address | 2700 Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue SE, Washington, D.C. |
Coordinates | 38°51′11″N 77°00′11″W / 38.853095°N 77.002944°W |
Construction started | 2009 |
Completed | July 29, 2013 |
Design and construction | |
Architecture firm |
Perkins and Will HOK WDG Architecture |
Website | |
uscg.mil |
Douglas A. Munro Coast Guard Headquarters Building is the headquarters of the United States Coast Guard and is located in Washington, D. C.
By the time of its foundation in 1915, U. S. Coast Guard headquarters shared space with its parent agency, United States Department of Treasury. In the same year, the U. S. Coast Guard moved to Munsey Trust Building, which was home up until 1919. In 1921 Bond Building became new building for headquarters. By the 1930s, U. S. Coast Guard Headquarters units were split into three venues – Treasury Annex, the Wilkins Building and the Liberty Loan Building.
In 1942, U. S. Coast Guard Headquarters consolidated those offices into the Southern Railway Building. Between 1963 and 1971 U. S. Coast Guard Headquarters units occupied 800 Independence Avenue Southwest along with Federal Aviation Agency. In early 1960s and in early 1970s agency also occupied 1300 E Street Northwest. In 1970 U. S. Coast Guard Headquarters moved into Nassif Building along with its new parent agency United States Department of Transportation. Last building to be headquarters was Transpoint Building, leased by General Services Administration since 1979 from Laszlo N. Tauber & Associates, which constructed the building in 1973 (building also served as headquarters for Naval Sea Systems Command between 2013 and 2015).
Initially in 1990s U. S. Coast Guard Headquarters units planned to relocate to 1200 New Jersey Avenue Southeast along with U. S. Department of Transportation, but as U. S. Coast Guard was transferred to United States Department of Homeland Security, plans were scrapped.
In 2004 U. S. Coast Guard began exploring its need for a new headquarters facility. The General Services Administration, the Office of Management and Budget, and U. S. Department of Homeland Security determined that it would be more cost-effective for the U. S. Coast Guard to move to a secure, federally owned site than to find a replacement lease for Transpoint Building. By 2006 new U. S. Coast Guard Headquarters Building in St. Elizabeths Hospital ground was proposed in 2006 federal budget, although, construction of the building began in 2009 after receiving funding by American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.