The General Services Administration (GSA) released on March 4 a list of “non-core” federal buildings and facilities that are being considered for disposal or sale.
Buildings on the revised list include the Speaker Nancy Pelosi Federal Building in San Francisco, the Ronald H. Brown U.S. Mission to the United Nations in New York, the Sam Nunn Atlanta Federal Center, the Rosa Parks Federal Building in Michigan, and the Senator Paul Simon Federal Building in Illinois.
The GSA stated that these listed properties are “not core to government operations” and that selling them would help ensure that “taxpayer dollars are no longer spent on vacant or underutilized federal spaces.”
In a statement announcing the planned disposal of non-core assets, the GSA stated that most of the listed properties are functionally obsolete and primarily consist of office space.
“Decades of funding deficiencies have resulted in many of these buildings becoming functionally obsolete and unsuitable for use by our federal workforce,” it stated. “We can no longer hope that funding will emerge to resolve these longstanding issues.”
According to the agency, the initial list of more than 440 buildings spans nearly 80 million rentable square feet and represents more than $8.3 billion in recapitalization needs.
The GSA stated that it would consider divesting non-core assets from government ownership “in an orderly fashion” to save about $430 million in annual operating costs.
“GSA’s decisive action to dispose of non-core assets leverages the private sector, drives improvements for our agency customers, and best serves local communities,” it stated.
The agency also identified certain core assets that “are needed for critical government operations,” including courthouses, land ports of entry, and facilities critical to national defense and law enforcement. It stated that the government plans to retain these assets to meet long-term needs.
The move comes as the Trump administration intensifies efforts to eliminate waste and unnecessary government spending.
Since taking office on Jan. 20, the Trump administration has implemented sweeping executive actions on various federal agencies to reduce federal spending and downsize the workforce—particularly those involved in the previous administration’s diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives—except for those handling essential duties.
One of the executive orders signed by President Donald Trump was aimed at advancing the government’s cost-cutting efforts, led by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), an advisory body headed by Elon Musk.
That order directs departments to immediately review all contracts and grants for “waste, fraud, and abuse” and to justify and publicly release government payments and travel expenses where possible. The GSA was also directed to create a plan for offloading any unnecessary government-owned or leased real estate property.