Visiting Public Buildings
Learn about GSA's extensive portfolio and leadership in sustainability and preserving historic buildings by exploring the buildings in the National Capital Region.
Please use this link to the map below showing locations of Public Art and Buildings in the National Capital Region managed by the U.S. General Services Administration.
- Ariel Rios Federal Building
- Central Heating Plant
- E. Barrett Prettyman US Courthouse
- Federal Trade Commission Federal Building
- GSA Headquarters Building
- Herbert C. Hoover Federal Building
- Hubert H. Humphrey Building
- Internal Revenue Service Federal Building
- J. Edgar Hoover FBI Building
- Lafayette Building
- Liberty Loan Federal Building
- Lyndon Baines Johnson Building
- Mary E. Switzer Building
- Old Post Office Building
- Orville Wright Federal Building
- Robert C. Weaver Federal Building
- Robert F. Kennedy Department of Justice Building
- Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center
- Sidney R. Yates Federal Building
- Stewart Lee Udall Federal Building
- Theodore Roosevelt Federal Building
- United States Tax Court
- Veterans Affairs Building
- Wilbur J. Cohen Federal Building
- Wilbur Wright Federal Building
- William B. Bryant Annex
- William Jefferson Clinton Federal Building
- Winder Building
- 4600 Silver Hill Road
U.S. General Services Administration
Established by President Truman in 1949, one of the primary roles of the U.S. General Services Administration is the management and care of federally owned and leased buildings throughout the United States. Totaling over 9,600 properties, GSA is responsible for implementing innovative solutions in sustainability and green building as well as managing the ever-growing inventory of historic buildings. GSA's inventory spans the breadth of our nation's history, representing dozens of architectural styles and playing host to numerous historic events.
National Capital Region
Located in Washington D.C., the National Capital Region serves government customers in the Washington D.C. metro area, including Northern Virginia and Southern Maryland. Learn more about GSA's extensive portfolio and leadership in sustainability and preserving historic buildings by exploring the buildings in the National Capital Region.