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The NEOB is the brick building in the extreme upper left-hand corner of the photo. The White House is in the center. The New Executive Office Building (NEOB) is a U.S. federal government office building in Washington, D.C., for the executive branch. The building is located at 725 17th Street NW, on the north side of Pennsylvania Avenue.
Daniel Webster Senate Page Residence; United States Department of Agriculture South Building; Department of Labor Building; Douglas A. Munro Coast Guard Headquarters Building; Frederick Douglass National Historic Site
The Robert C. Weaver Federal Building is a 10-story office building in Washington, D.C., owned by the federal government of the United States. Completed in 1968, it serves as the headquarters of the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). [ 4 ]
Government buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Washington, D.C. (3 C, 41 P) Buildings of the United States government in Washington, D.C. (5 C, 70 P) Attacks on government buildings and structures in Washington, D.C. (2 C, 5 P)
The O'Neill building is shared by the House of Representatives and the Department of Health and Human Services. It houses about 2,000 staffers. The House of Representatives is using the building, in part, to temporarily house committee staff who are being displaced by a Cannon House Office Building renovation project due to last until 2025. [4]
The government of the District of Columbia held a competition for the design of a new district building in 1818. George Hadfield, who had supervised construction of the United States Capitol from October 1795 to May 1798, [4] [5] submitted a design for a new district building, but it was judged to be too costly. Hadfield eventually won the ...
Arthur Brown, Jr. designed the Labor building between 1928 and 1931, and construction was completed in 1934. [6] The building entrance is at 1301 Constitution Avenue, NW. The Department of Labor was the original occupant of the building. It vacated the building in 1979, when it moved to the Frances Perkins Building. The Customs Service took ...
The U.S. General Services Administration Building, the first government building designed for the specific needs of a designated federal department, was the first federal building to use limestone facing and one of the first buildings in Washington, DC constructed of steel framing. It fills the entire city block between E, F, Eighteenth and ...