How will BRAC affect area real estate?
Well, one of the big pieces to that puzzle was solved at the end of
last month when the announcement was made that Fort Belvoir was going
to add the Mark Center to its list of holdings rather than heading for
Springfield. Donald Carr Director of Public Relations for the US Army
at Fort Belvoir contacted me in response to my recent post.
He said, "of the total 19,300 jobs, 4,400 are coming to main post Fort
Belvoir; 8,500 to the EPG (Engineer Proving Grounds); and, 6,400 to the
Mark Center. Additionally, only about 500 of the 19,300 are actually
new population incoming to the region."
This makes clear that there will probably be no great regional surge in home values
as a result of these changes. In fact, many service members may opt to
stay where they are and drive across town to new offices and
locations. The official press release regarding the Mark Center:
The U.S. Army announced today, Sept. 29,
that the Mark Center in Alexandria, Va., will be the future home of the
6,400 personnel associated with the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure,
Recommendation # 133. The decision puts in place the last piece of the
Fort Belvoir, Va., BRAC initiative that sites more than 19,000 workers
to the installation.
The BRAC 133 jobs - a collection of
Defense Department-level agencies whose move is being managed by the
Washington Headquarters Service - are the last remaining of those being
realigned to Fort Belvoir.
"The decision concludes more than a year
of work by hundreds of people in the Army, surrounding communities, and
all levels of government to develop proposals and options for review by
the selection board," said Assistant Secretary of the Army for
Installations and Environment Keith Eastin.
Following completion of Fort Belvoir's
BRAC Environmental Impact Study in Summer 2007, the Army's Record of
Decision, or ROD, directed placement of all but the BRAC 133 jobs. The
jobs originally would have been placed at Fort Belvoir's Engineer
Proving Ground in Springfield, Va.
However, because another 8,500 jobs of
the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency were also placed there,
significant concerns for traffic impacts in the area prompted the Army
to agree to limit EPG to the NGA jobs, and to look elsewhere for the
BRAC 133 jobs. In September 2007 evaluators began work to study
alternative sites, including the General Services Administration
warehouse site in Springfield and commercial sites in the region.
BRAC legislation and follow-on language
in the 2008 National Defense Authorization Act allow the Army to
purchase land in the National Capital Region to facilitate Fort
Belvoir's realignment. "Any non-DOD site selected would have to become
part of Fort Belvoir in order to comply with the law," Eastin said. The
Army must now buy the Mark Center property to make it part of Fort
Belvoir.
In arriving at the Mark Center decision,
Eastin said the Army considered multiple factors, including project
timelines, transportation management and site adaptability. "The Mark
Center site resolves security issues, improves space requirements and
mission relationships, and minimizes changes to existing living,
working, and quality of life issues," he said.
"The Mark Center site minimizes to the
greatest extent practicable disruption of current commuting needs and
mission coordination requirements of the workers," said James Turkel,
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, who led the evaluation team. "It will
also require little to no change in contractor support relationships,
as well as changes to residency or schools requirements for the
workers."
Eastin echoed the point. "The new
commute for the realigned personnel supports their mission by keeping
them in close proximity to the Pentagon agencies and senior leaders
they support," he said.
Post officials said putting the jobs at
the Alexandria City site reduces the number of jobs coming to Fairfax
County's part of the post to 12,900 - 4,400 to Fort Belvoir's main
post, and 8,500 to Engineer Proving Ground.
The Army must now purchase the Mark
Center property to meet BRAC law and plans to make the purchase before
the end of the year. Construction is scheduled to begin on the site in
January 2009, according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.