| | Projects | |  | | Contacts | |  | | Contents | |  | Site 11 acres, in Federal Triangle, on
Pennsylvania Avenue at 13th Street
| |  | | Washington, D.C.Gross Floor Area
3.7 million s/f including 900,500 s/f parking Client Federal Triangle Corporation for Pennsylvania Avenue Development Corporation and the General Services Administration Time Frame Planning: 10/89– Construction: 12/90– Completion: 1998 Public
Dedication: 5/5/98 |
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Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center |
 | Washington, D.C. Completed 1998 |
A multiuse international office and trade center uniquely combining public, private and government facilities |
 | Click on image to enlarge The Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center was designed to complete and augment the 70-acre wedge of government offices known as Federal Triangle. It occupies the last open site on Pennsylvania Avenue (a former parking lot two blocks from the White House) where construction was halted by the Depression. The building was designed to complement its historic
context in materials and scale yet its architectural strategy is modern. It articulates structure and creates significant public spaces while fulfilling an extraordinarily rich mixed-use program of government offices, private businesses and public amenities. At 3.7 million s/f, the RRB/ITC is second only to the Pentagon as the largest federal building ever undertaken.The design's pronounced diagonal geometry is a direct response to Pennsylvania Avenue, which here bends east toward
the Capitol. The building meets the Avenue at 90°
and hinges back from a corner Rotunda to symbolically turn the street into the site. People are invited to enter a large outdoor plaza and to continue inside where a skylit conical space and public concourse offer retail, dining and vital connections to mass transit and neighboring buildings. In the seemingly impenetrable wall of government buildings that separates downtown from ceremonial Washington, the Reagan Building emphasizes access and permeability. It is both a destination and a public link to the nation's Mall, its monuments and museums.
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 | 1.62 million s/f offices (1,485,000 s/f Federal; 137,400 s/f privately operated Trade Center); 130,000 s/f public circulation; 14,000 s/f
atrium; 83,000 s/f retail and exhibit areas; 57,100 s/f conference center; 43,500 s/f food court (980 seats); 33,850 s/f auditorium (620 seats); 28,500 s/f ballroom; 21,500 s/f dining establishments (4); 19,400 s/f exhibition hall; 13,900 s/f reception hall; 80,000 s/f U.S. Center for World Trade; 5,600 s/f Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars (including the Woodrow Wilson Memorial); 950,000 s/f parking for 2,000 cars on 4 levels underground; 5.3-acre plaza areas; commissioned
sculpture (Martin Puryear bronze, Stephen Robin cast aluminum flowers; Keith Sonnier neon and glass screen installation) |
| Building Owners and Managers Association: Office Building of the Year Award, Government Building Category |
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American Institute of Architects New York State Design Awards: Honor Award |
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| American Institute of Architects
Presidential Design Citation |
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| Washington Building Congress: Craftsmanship Award |
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| General Services Administration Design Awards: Honor Award |
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New York Association of Consulting Engineers: The Diamond Award for Excellence in the Category of Structural Engineering Design of Buildings |
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Pei Cobb Freed & Partners services |
 | Architectural Design; Interior Design of public spaces; coordination with associate architect on construction documents and construction administration |
 | Ellerbe Becket Architects and Engineers, Washington, D.C. |
 | Weiskopf & Pickworth, New York, NY |
 | Cosentini Associates LLP, New York, NY |
Mechanical / Electrical / Plumbing |
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Ellerbe Becket, Inc., Washington, D.C. |
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