Careers in federal government are known for job security and
generous pensions, but also for layers of bureaucracy and cold, gray,
impersonal buildings. The bureaucracy is unlikely to change, but soon,
government workers around the country could be organizing hurricane
relief, investigating regulatory infractions or rubber-stamping Social
Security payments while natural light flows around them and kombucha
pours freely from tapped kegs.
The federal government is on the hunt for coworking space, and it
wants to lease from small businesses. The General Services
Administration has put out a request for proposals, seeking coworking
space around the country. The request is classified as a “Partial Small
Business Set-Aside,” which means that the government is aiming to award
at least part of this contract to small businesses. Contract amounts
could range from $1K to $10M per vendor. The RFP asks for pricing on
coworking space over a one-year period, plus four additional one-year
periods.
Francesco De Camilli, Colliers International vice president and
head of flexible workspace consulting, said that the GSA has a few
one-off deals for coworking already in place, but “this is the first
formal RFP at a national level.” (De Camilli was formerly the chief
operating officer of Bisnow Media.)
The GSA occupies some 370M SF of office space nationwide, so to
have even 2% or 5% of its space in consideration for coworking
“represents a huge opportunity,” De Camilli said. “Their approach is to
pick the best-in-market operators, not to establish a single point of
contact with a national platform.”
Coworking spaces would be ideal for emergency response teams that
need to set up offices following a hurricane, he said, but also for
various other project-based initiatives. Some federal budgets are set
for 12-month periods, so it makes sense for real estate contracts to
follow the same short terms.
Coworking operators do need to have a presence in four markets to be considered, according to the RFP.
“I wouldn’t be surprised if you see small operators teaming up amongst themselves,” De Camilli said.
This would enable them to qualify, plus offer pricing power and
scale. He said the RFP lets the GSA “be in a position to have
pre-negotiated rates and terms with a network of cowork service
providers such that when the need hits, they can quickly turn on office
space.”
The solicitation asks for pricing for unreserved and reservable
workstations and reservable offices. The GSA does not want proposals to
include costs for refreshments. Federal rules prohibit alcoholic
beverages in certain instances.
“Working beyond the confines of traditional government offices has
become more common,” the solicitation reads. “Government employees are
now commonly equipped with technological tools to work from anywhere …
[The change could] promote a responsible use of taxpayer dollars.”
The GSA is looking for space in Tier 1 markets New York, Los
Angeles, Chicago, the Bay Area, the D.C. area, Boston and Cambridge, and
Seattle. Some of the Tier 2 markets it is interested in are Salt Lake
City, Atlanta, Philadelphia, Houston, Dallas-Fort Worth, Phoenix, San
Diego, Minneapolis, New Orleans, Las Vegas, Cleveland, Austin, St. Louis
and South Florida. Applicants will be chosen based on experience, past
performance and management plans. The closing date is Jan. 30, so
interested parties will want to submit their materials soon.
https://www.bisnow.com/south-florida/news/coworking/federal-government-coworking-nationwide-102613
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