-
^^^^y^^'^^^^^f-':'^^. ::~'^~^:^&^'
States
ental Protection Agency
Facilities Guide
-------
Facilities Management and Services Division
1989
-------
Z00
DIRECTORS'
STATEMENTS
nformation Resources Center
JS EPA (3404)
M Street, SW
'ashington, DC 20460
I am proud to introduce this comprehensive
booklet of Environmental Protection Agency facili-
ties, located throughout the United States and the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. This booklet
identifies and describes these facilities according
to region and program office. We in the Office of
Administration believe that this booklet provides
valuable information in a comprehensive format
that will help EPA employees fulfill the manadate
,of the Agency.
I urn pleased to present our first published booklet
or Environmental Protection Agency facilities
located throughout the country. This booklet was
prepared and published by the Facilities Manage-
ment and Services Divison because we believe
tli at there existed a need for a comprehensive
package that described EPA facilities nationwide.
Until now, no central directory existed that
identified, by activity, the amount or type of EPA
facilities and their capability of supporting various
regional and program functions. With the objec-
tive of serving our EPA clients by providing this
information, this project was undertaken and
completed in April 1989. We plan to update this
booklet periodically.
John C. Chamberlin
Director
Office of Administration
Vincette L Goerl
Director
Facilities Management and Services Division
CM
-------
f.
-------
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
Introduction 1
Headquarters , 2
Region 1 4
Region II 6
Region lit 8
Region IV 10
Region V '. 12
Region VI 16
Region VII 18
Region VIM 20
Region IX 22
Region X 24
Office of Administration and Resources
Management 26
Office of Air and Radiation 28
Office of Enforcement and Compliance
Monitoring 31
Office of the Inspector General 32
Office of Pesticides and Toxic Substances . . 34
Office of Research and Development.... 36
Office of Solid Waste and Emergency
Response 52
Office of Water Programs 53
Las Vegas, Nevada Facilities 54
Eidison, New Jersey Facilities 55
Research Triangle Park, North Carolina
Facilities 56
Cincinnati, Ohio Facilities 58
/acronyms 59
/appendices 61
-------
IV
-------
INTRODUCTION
This book provides information on all the facilities currently utilized by the Environmental Protection
Agency nationwide. It emphasizes the dynamic relationship between the growth of EPA since its inception
in 1970, and the physical infrastructure necessary to support the EPA's expanding functions.
The book is organized into three major sections. The first section discusses the facilities at Headquarters
in metropolitan Washington D.C. and the ten regions. Tho second section discusses field facilities located
throughout the United States that are under the guidance of Assistant Administrators (for example, the
Office of Research and Development Environmental Research Laboratories). The third section discusses
EPA sites (i.e. Edison, New Jersey; Las Vegas, Nevada; Research Triangle Park (RTP), North Carolina
and Cincinnati, Ohio) that are under the jurisdiction of more than one Assistant Administrator.
EPA facilities are operated under various arrangements: some are Federally-owned and under the care
and accountability of EPA, others are Federal Buildings for which rent is paid to GSA, some are leased
directly by the EPA or through the General Services Administration (GSA), and others operate under
an Interagency Agreement (IAG). Wherever a piece of property is referred to as 'owned' by the agency,
it means that the property is owned by the U.S. Government and under the care and accountability of
the agency specified. Where possible, occupants are subdivided into Federal EPA employees and
others, a reference to contractors, AARPs, SISs, and dotailees from other agencies.
Unless specified otherwise, use of the term square feet throughout the text refers to gross square feet
for leased space (including hallways, restrooms etc. and excluding space which is used jointly by several
Federal agencies), and net occupiable square feet for owned space. EPA occupies a total of 5,408,873
square feet. Additionally, the Agency leases 97,210 square feet of space that is used jointly, often
representing the EPA share of parking and cafeterias al multiple-tenant sites, and approximately 10,000
square feet of parking for which EPA alone is responsible. EPA averages 132 square feet per work
station, significantly, below the required 135 square feot per work station specified by GSA Regulation
D-73.
-------
HEADQUARTERS
HEADQUARTERS:
WASHINGTON, D.C. METROPOLITAN AREA
EPA Headquarters currently occupy 1,228,484
square feet of space and 648 indoor parking
spaces in three leased buildings. Two of the
buildings, Waterside Mali and the Fairchild Build-
ing, are in Washington, D.C. and one, Crystal
Mall 2, is in Arlington, Virginia. The space in
Waterside Mall is occupied under four separate
leases, the primary leases of which expires in
September 1992. Waterside Mall houses approxi-
mately 82 percent of EPA Headquarters person-
nel in 78 percent of the EPA's total Headquarters
square feet.
The dispersion of EPA Headquarters personnel
in three locations is inconvenient and inefficient,
necessitating that we provide a shuttle service
and other support services. To maximize effi-
ciency of its operations, EPA is working with GSA
in the planning of a new consolidated building
scheduled for 1992. EPA is authorized up to
1,400,000 occupiable square feet of space plus
appropriate parking for a total consolidation of
EPA Headquarters. The effort to consolidate EPA
Headquarters is a high priority of the Office of
Administration and Resources Management and
is being managed by the Project 1992 staff.
Fairchild Building
Waterside Mall
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
401 M Street Southwest,
Washington D.C.
GSA lease
5,078
1,004,450
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Crystal Mall 2
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
499 South Capitol Street
Southwest, Washington
D.C.
GSA lease
858
121,015
1921-31-41 Jefferson Davis
Highway, Arlington VA
GSA lease
566
103,019
TOTAL HEADQUARTERS
Occupants
Square Feet
6,566
1,228,484
While the number of EPA Headquarters personnel
and the relative amount of space they occupy
vary highly over short periods of time, the
following chart approximates these numbers at
present:
Program
AO
OARM"
OAR
OEA
OGC
OECM
OIG
OPPE
OPTS"
ORD
OSWER
OW
Occupants Square Feel*
229
1,218
418
174
161
164
134
315
1,480
383
830
760
35,000
156,000
53,645
27,870
26,300
29,000
19,660
40,900
199,162
54,290
110,000
95,000
* some program special purpose space may be included in square
footages
** program special purpose space has been omitted
-------
Waterside Mall
->!*} I *t> li?'**!V
r f Erf r £#&;
*#$£«&
rtE^rSg&a
Fairchild Buidling
Crystal Mall 2
-------
REGION I
REGIONAL OFFICE:
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS
Region I encompasses the states of Connecticut,
Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode
Island and Vermont. The John P. Kennedy
Federal Building in Boston, Massachusetts houses
EPA Region I offices, the Office of Criminal
Investigations/OECM-NEIC and the Office of
Audits/OIG. The Region I offices will need to
move temporarily to an as-yet unspecified loca-
tion in February 1990 due to asbestos removal
and building modernization in the present site.
Region I has requested an additional 30,000 to
40,000 square feet to meet the space require-
ments of its personnel, whose needs have
expanded.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
John F. Kennedy Federal
Building
space assignment in
Federal Building
348 EPA; 40 others
75,098
WASTE MANAGEMENT DIVISION:
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS
In 1987, two locations for the Waste Management
Division were consolidated into an old building
rehabilitated for commercial space. The newly-
occupied space features a center that was
specifically designed for record-keeping, and a
large, modern conference room with audio-visual
equipment and optimum acoustics for holding
Agency-wide hearings, meeting and training ses-
sions. Additional space may be needed to meet
the expanding Superfund and RCRA functions.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
90 Canal Street
GSA lease
139 EPA; 24 others
28,600
NEW ENGLAND REGIONAL LABORATORY:
LEXINGTON, MASSACHUSETTS
The EPA New England Regional Laboratory
occupies a 4-acre site within an industrial/
research development park just off Hartwell
Avenue and Route 128 in Lexington, Massachu-
setts. The EPA facilities consist of a main
laboratory and a storage building for a total of
40,800 square feet. There is also a fenced area
for vehicle and equipment storage, and 22,500
square feet of parking.
The laboratory facility is immediately adjacent to
the interstate highway system and 16 miles to a
major airport. In this regard, Lexington offers a
central and accessible location and focal point for
the environmental support activities of Region I.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
60 Westview Street
GSA lease
74 EPA; 9 others
56,021
TOTAL REGION
Occupants
Square Feet
634
159,719
-------
Regional Office: Boston, MA
Waste Management Division: Boston, MA
New England Regional Laboratory: Lexington, MA
5
-------
REGION II
REGIONAL OFFICE:
NEW YORK, NEW YORK
Region II is responsible for EPA activities in the
states of New York and New Jersey, the Com-
monwealth of Puerto Rico and the Territory of the
Virgin Islands. The Region occupies two office
buildings in New York City: the Jacob K. Javits
Federal Building (since 1970) and another nearby
Federal Office Building, which is used by audit
and investigations personnel of the Office of the
Inspector General. The Region's space in these
two buildings has become crowded due to
additional Superfund personnel. Presently, an
additional 27,125 square feet in New York City
has been requested, in 1993, Region II is
projected to move to a new building to be owned
jointly by New York City and the Federal Govern-
ment.
Jacob K. Javits Federal Building
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
26 Federal Plaza
space assignment in
Federal building
928
116,932
Federal Office Building
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
90 Church Street, Room
802
space assignment in
Federal building
31
3,733
REGION II ESD:
EDISON, NEW JERSEY
The Region II ESD operates an 180 acre
laboratory at Edison, New Jersey. Currently, five
buildings are occupied by EPA staff. There are
also four large warehouses for storage and
several trailers to house the approximately 183
contractors on site. The facility supports a
component laboratory of the Office of Research
and Development (ORD) and the Office of Solid
Waste and Emergency Response's (OSWER)
Environmental Response Team. Edison has been
chosen as the site for a major ORD Superfund
Program Testing and Evaluation facility. This $5.6
million laboratory is presently in the design stage.
See page 55 for further discussion. There are
approximately 120 Region II ESD employees in
Edison.
OTHER FACILITIES
New York, New York:
6,037 square feet general storage (201 Varick
Street)
Santurce, Puerto Rico:
4,500 square feet office space for the Carib-
bean Field Office
TOTAL REGION
Occupants
Square Feet
1,103
542,710
6
-------
Jacob K. Javits Federal Buidling
New York, NY
Federal Office Buidling
New York, NY
-------
REGION III
REGIONAL OFFICE:
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA
Region HI encompasses the states of Delaware,
Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia,
and the District of Columbia. Its offices have been
located in the 841 Chestnut building since 1984,
where the EPA is the largest Federal tenant
agency. EPA components include the Division
Inspector General for Audit/OIG, Office of Investi-
gations/OIG, and the Office of Criminal Investiga-
tions/ OECM-NEIC. Importantly, the building
manager is responsive to the Region's facility
needs. Additional space may be needed as the
Regional functions increase.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
841 Chestnut Street
GSA lease
725 EPA; 260 other
152,576
ANNAPOLIS LABORATORY:
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
The laboratory in Annapolis is the main laboratory
for Region 111. This well-equipped laboratory does
considerable contract laboratory work involving
quality control and analysis. The facility also has
a field team. Region III also has a field team. The
need for additional space is particularly keen at
the Annapolis Laboratory. To alleviate the long-
term space requirement needs, plans are being
discussed for a replacement laboratory-
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
839 Bestgate Road
GSA lease
48 EPA; 27 other
44,638
CHESAPEAKE BAY PROGRAM:
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND
The unique Chesapeake Bay Program is a
multi-agency, multi-state program designed to
clean up the Chesapeake Bay. It has been
located at the Annapolis City Marina since 1984.
The facility features a large conference room that
is capable of seating approximately 100 people.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
410 Severn Avenue
GSA lease
18 EPA; 41 other
11,191
WHEELING OFFICE:
WHEELING, WEST VIRGINIA
The Wheeling Office utilizes 18,840 square feet
of the Methodist Office Building on the periphery
of Wheeling, West Virginia, including 4,200
square feet of outdoor parking. The facility houses
for EPA a field inspection team, the Regional
biology laboratory, a state liaison office, and an
environmental emergency response team. Space
requirements are under review so that a succeed-
ing lease can be issued. The building is also used
by the West Virginia Department of Natural
Resources, Health Department and Department
of Agriculture. The focus of these various groups
is largely oriented to the waters of the upper Ohio
River drainage.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
11th and Chapline Streets
GSA lease
24 EPA; 6 other
18,840
8
-------
OTHER FACILITIES
* Annapolis, Maryland:
1,973 square feet for Superfund files
Middletown, Pennsylvania:
200 square feet for general storage
Wheeling, West Virginia:
3,805 square feet for storage
TOTAL REGION
Occupants
Square Feet
1,140
233,223
Annapolis Laboratory: Annapolis, MD
Regional Office: Philadelphia, PA
Chesapeake Bay Program: Annapolis, MO
Wheeling Office: Wheeling, WV
9
-------
REGION IV
REGIONAL OFFICE:
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
Region IV covers more states than any other
region; i.e. Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky,
Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, and
Tennessee. The Region IV offices are located in
two adjacent buildings in Atlanta, Georgia: at 345
Courtland Street, and Renaissance Square Tower.
Additional space may be required as the Regional
functions expand.
The EPA has leased the building at 345 Courtland
Street for approximately 11 years. Region IV
employees occupy the entire 5-story building.
Recently, the Region has upgraded the HVAC
system to improve the quality of indoor air,
finalized plans for a regional records center and
wellness center, and installed systems furniture
throughout the building. Adjacent to 345 Court-
land Street at Renaissance Square Tower, Re-
gion IV occupies several floors and partial floors
to house various components of the Human
Resources Management Branch, Office of Inte-
grated Environmental Analysts, Office of Regional
Counsel, Water Management Division, and Air,
Pesticides, and Toxics Management Division.
Renaissance Square Tower is also the site of
18,900 square feet of leased indoor parking.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
345 Courtland Street/120
Ralph McGill Blvd.
GSA leases
964
106,046/69,108
(5,000 square feet) is a pre-fabricated metal
structure housing both ORD and Region IV
employees, several EPA-owned mobile homes
are also used for laboratories and offices by ESD.
ESD obtains additional office and lab space from
the U.S. Department of Agriculture in Athens
(lAGs-U.S. Forest Service Building, 3,234 square
feet for offices and laboratories, and Richard B.
Russel Research Center, 1,000 square feet for
offices). ESD leases warehouse storage and
office space (10,028 square feet) from the Athens
Seed Company. The long term solution to space
requirements need to be addressed. Interim
solutions are being pursued.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
960 College Station Road
EPA owned
127 Region IV; 151 ORD
62,680
OTHER FACILITIES
Lakeland, Florida:
330 square feet (Federal Building)
Tucker, Georgia:
688 square feet laboratory sampling prepara-
tion and storage, and office space
TOTAL REGION
Occupants
Square Feet
1,096
254,742 (includes some
ORD)
REGIONAL LABORATORY:
ATHENS, GEORGIA
Opened in 1966, the facility at College Station
Road (57,680 square feet) houses both the
Region IV Environmental Services Division and
the ORD Environmental Research Laboratory.
ORD also has a building at Bailey Road (EPA-
owned space). The Bailey Road Annex building
10
-------
gSPSi'^fiBHBi
mm
Regional Office: Atlanta. GA
Regional Laboratory (Main Building): Athens, GA
Regional Laboratory (Bailey Road Annex): Athens, GA
11
-------
REGION V
REGIONAL OFFICE:
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
EPA Region V encompasses the states of Illinois,
Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wiscon-
sin. Region V utilizes significant amounts of office
space in four Chicago area buildings, it has
experienced significant growth in recent years
due to Superfund, as well as programs related to
the Clean Water Act. This has propelled the
Region to both expand and decentralize its space
occupancies. To consolidate and increase its
efficiency, Region V plans to move its offices into
a new Federal Building upon its completion in
1991 or 1992.
The Kluczynski Federal Building has been the
main site for the Region V offices. As needs have
expanded, other buildings have been used to
house the region's activities.
The Trans Union Building lease expires in 1989.
The lease will be extended until the Region moves
to the new Federal Building. EPA components in
the building include the Water Division, Planning
and Management Division, Great Lakes National
Program Office, and Regional Counsel.
Region V also occupies some space in the old
Federal Office Building for its Central Regional
Laboratory and the Environmental Services Divi-
sion. This building Is primarily designed for offices.
Therefore, its utilization as a laboratory presents
some several incompatibilities. This building is
being considered for extensive renovation during
FY 1991/1992 which may require that tenants
vacate it during this work.
Trans Union Building
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
111 West Jackson
Boulevard
GSA lease
401 EPA; 176 other
87,815
Federal Office Building
Address 536 South Clark Street
Arrangement space assignment in
Federal building
Occupants 134 EPA; 102 other
Square Feet 66,966
EASTERN DISTRICT OFFICE:
WESTLAKE, OHIO
Located in a small one-story shopping center in
suburban Cleveland, this facility houses Environ-
mental Services Division's Eastern District Office.
The interior meets the physical requirements of
the Eastern District Office well, and has been
modified to accommodate a minimum of labwork
analysis. Favorably, the owner is responsive to
the maintenance requests of the Eastern District
Office. An expanded laboratory at the site would
be unsuitable due to its inappropriate exhaust
system.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
25089 Center Ridge Road
GSA lease
22 EPA
17,548
Kluczynski Federal Building
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
230 South Dearborn
space assignment in
Federal building
601 EPA; 174 other
110,354
12
-------
Regional Office: Chicago, IL
Kluczynski Federal Building
Regional Office: Chicago. IL
Trans Union Building
Eastern District Office: Westlake.OH
Regional Office: Chicago, IL
Federal Office Buidling
13
-------
EMERGENCY RESPONSE TEAM:
GROSSE ILE, MICHIGAN
The Emergency Response Team is located in the
Detroit River on an island at the U.S./Canada
border. The site is a former Naval Air Station
where President Bush was stationed at the end
of World War II. The Naval Air Station closed in
the early 1970s. It has since been used as a
municipal airport, an industrial park, and by the
EPA. The Emergency Response Team utilizes a
well-constructed two-story masonry building, two
brick outer buildings, a tin hanger and parking on
the 2.7 acre site that it shares with the the Large
Lakes Research Station operated by the Office
of Research and Development (see page 46). The
site also has four Nike missile silos and a quarry
pond. The Emergency Response Team is cen-
trally located with respect to its service area of
Michigan and Ohio. This enables it to manage
CERCLA-based removal activities at uncontrolled
hazardous substances sites, and respond to
releases of oil and hazardous substances. Fur-
ther, its proximity to the municipal airport and
location within 20 miles of the Detroit Metropolitan
Airport enables the Team to respond to emergen-
cies rapidly by methods such as chartering planes
to remote areas to clean up toxic spills. In general,
the site and buildings are appropriate for support-
ing current programs functions.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
9311 Groh Road
EPA owned
14 EPA; 2 other
63,000
OTHER FACILITIES
Chicago, Illinois:
1,200 square feet general storage (U.S. Custom-
house)
Chicago, Illinois:
2,274 square feet warehouse storage (Federal
Supply Depot)
Argonne, Illinois:
997 square feet containment facility
Cincinnati, Ohio:
31,404 and 900 square feet for warehouse
storage and outdoor parking, respectively (U.S.
Postal Service Building)
31,404 square feet (Dalton Street Warehouse)
Akron, Ohio:
296 square feet (Federal Building and U.S.
Courthouse)
Duluth, Minnesota:
353 square feet of general storage (Federal
Building)
TOTAL REGION
Occupants
Square Feet
1,618
383,107
14
-------
15
-------
REGION VI
REGIONAL OFFICE:
DALLAS, TEXAS
Region VI includes the states of Arkansas,
Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas.
The Region VI offices were consolidated two
years ago into the First Interstate Bank Building.
The Region is co-located with the Office of
Inspector General Investigation, Office of Inspec-
tor General-Audit, and Office of Criminal Investi-
gation. The Region has recently increased its
occupation from four to five floors due to addi-
tional space requirements. Increased space may
be needed as the Regional functions increase.
The Region's space has been designed to provide
the staff with an open office environment: they
have ergonomic work stations, good lighting, and
sufficient filing space. An audio background
system called White Sound is reducing excessive
noise. There are 10,800 square feet of outdoor
parking space at the Regional VI office.
Approximately 40 EPA employees and 15 con-
tractors will be located at the new Regional Lab.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
1445 Ross Avenue
GSA lease
710 EPA; 80 other
172,111
REGIONAL LABORATORY:
HOUSTON, TEXAS
The Region VI laboratory in Houston occupies
retail commercial space, which has been altered,
where feasible, to conform with the changing
technology and mission objectives of the Region.
However, because it remains basically incompat-
ible with the increased laboratory/scientific re-
quirements of the laboratory, a state-of-the-art
Central Laboratory for Region VI is being de-
signed and constructed for the EPA under a
20-year EPA lease. It will have 29,742 net usable
square feet of office, laboratory and storage
space, and have approximately 55 work stations.
It is scheduled to be completed in February, 1990.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
6602-6612 Hornwood Drive
(present laboratory)
EPA lease
49
24,566 (net usable)
OTHER FACILITIES
New Orleans, Louisiana:
790 square feet of office space (U.S. Custom-
house)
Dallas, Texas:
5,852 square feet storage space (Federal
Building)
Dallas, Texas:
6,710 square feet indoor parking (Griffin Street
Auto Parking)
Dallas, Texas:
9,661 square feet general storage (3121 Irving
Boulevard)
Houston, Texas:
984 square feet office (Bob Casey Federal
Building)
San Antonio, Texas:
241 square feet for light industrial purposes
(U.S. Post Office and Courthouse)
TOTAL REGION
Occupants 852
Square Feet 214,181
16
-------
B.P.*. LABORATORY
HOIMTOM, TIXAI
Regional Laboratory: Houston, TX
17
-------
REGION VII
REGIONAL OFFICE:
KANSAS CITY, KANSAS
Region VII represents the EPA in the states of
Iowa, Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska. In 1985,
the Region VII offices moved from Kansas City,
Missouri to their present location in four recently-
renovated buildings in Kansas City, Kansas. The
Office of Criminal Investigations/OECM-NEIC is
also located there. The EPA offices are consid-
ered to be state-of-the-art; featuring color-
coordinated partitions, carpeting, and modern,
space efficient systems furniture. Two different
landlords own the EPA buildings and have
connected the four buildings to enable indoor
transit between them. The EPA offices are located
in the downtown area of Kansas City, which has
undergone significant urban renewal. Region VII
office space utilization has increased with the
addition of more Federal employees and contrac-
tors in tandem with the expanding Superfund,
Underground Storage Tanks and Clean Water
Act programs. EPA will acquire an additional
14,000 square feet of office space in April 1989
that is adjacent to its existing facility.
Addresses
Arrangements
Occupants
Square Feet
722-726 Minnesota Avenue
732-748 Minnesota Avenue
742 Minnesota Avenue
2 GSA leases
470
76,839 (total)
REGIONAL LABORATORY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES DIVISION:
KANSAS CITY, KANSAS
The Central Regional Laboratory and Environ-
mental Services Division are located in an older
building that was renovated to meet EPA needs
in the mid 1970s. The Central Regional Labora-
tory and Environmental Services Division have
acquired an additional 15,000 square feet of office
space to allow EPA to relocate office personnel
from existing laboratory space, which is awaiting
construction. EPA will take this opportunity to
upgrade the existing laboratory space to state-of-
the-art quality. The laboratory may receive a full
containment facility. The Region has requested
to convert some existing office space to laboratory
use.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
25 Funston Road
GSA lease
120
37,526
OTHER FACILITIES
Des Moines, Iowa:
1,188 square feet (Federal Building)
Kansas City, Kansas:
4,165 square feet indoor parking and storage
(625 Cheyenne)
Kansas City, Kansas:
3,000 square feet office (Security Bank Build-
ing)
Jefferson City, Missouri:
515 square feet office and parking
Kansas City, Missouri:
3,849 square feet warehouse storage (Federal
Center Building 11)
Kansas City, Missouri:
1,312 square feet office (Federal Office Build-
ing)
Lincoln, Nebraska:
2,560 square feet (Robert Denney Federal
Building and Courthouse)
TOTAL REGION
Occupants
Square Feet
630
130,954
18
-------
Regional Office: Kansas City. KS
Regional Laboratory and Environmental Services Division:
Kansas City, KS
19
-------
REGION VIII
REGIONAL OFFICE:
DENVER, COLORADO
Region VIII includes Colorado, Montana, North
Dakota, South Dakota, Utah and Wyoming. The
Regional offices have been located in the rela-
tively new Denver Place building since the
mid-1980s. This building offers available space
for expansion within the building, especially for
Superfund. The Region has increased its occu-
pancy by approximately 24,000 square feet in the
last two years. It is currently constructing a
conference/training and fitness center within the
building, to be completed this spring, that will offer
the Agency an alternative to holding large meet-
ings in Washington, D.C. With a space planning
contractor, the Region has arranged its offices
with systems furniture in a manner that enables
employees to work in a pleasant atmosphere that
is adaptive to their individual needs.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
999 18th Street, Suite 500
GSA lease
460 EPA; 72 other
96,045
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Denver Federal Center
space assignment from
GSA
58 EPA; 51 contractors
21,919
OTHER FACILITIES
Denver, Colorado:
285 square feet (Federal Building/Courthouse)
Grand Junction, Colorado:
380 square feet (Wayne Aspinali Federal
Building Courthouse)
Helena, Montana:
4,575 square feet (Federal Building/Court-
house)
Casper, Wyoming:
440 square feet (Federal Building/Post Office)
TOTAL REGION
Occupants
Square Feet
678
101,725
REGIONAL LABORATORY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES DIVISION:
LAKEWOOD, COLORADO
The Region VIII laboratory is assigned 21,919
square feet by GSA at several buildings at the
Federal Center in Lakewood, Colorado, a Denver
suburb approximately 8 miles from the Regional
offices. The laboratory site has been converted
from a World War II weapons and defense plant.
While the conversion was adequate, the facility
remains far from being an ideal laboratory: the
work space is crowded and the power and
ventilation systems were not designed for their
present usage. Region VIII is working on a
proposal to expand and modernize the laboratory.
20
-------
Regional Office: Denver, CO
Regional Laboratory and Environmental Services Division:
(Denver Federal Center Buidling #46; Lakewood, CO
21
-------
REGION IX
REGIONAL OFFICE:
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA
Region IX includes the states of Arizona, Califor-
nia, Hawaii and Nevada, as well as American
Samoa and Guam. The Regional offices utilize
space in two San Francisco buildings. The main
Region IX facilities and the Office of Criminal
Investigations/NEIC-OECM consist of approxi-
mately 50 percent of a cement-floored canning
factory that was constructed around 1917. To
meet the growing electrical, telephone and space
needs for computers and on-site EPA employees,
the Region leases additional office space at 211
Main Street. The Divisional Inspector General for
Audit Western Division/OlG, Divisional Inspector
General for Investigation Western Division/OIG
also occupy the latter building. The Region IX
offices are in the process of being consolidated
into one building by the summer of 1990.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
215 Fremont Street
GSA lease
751
103,813
211 Main Street
GSA lease
58
10,712
REGIONAL LABORATORY:
LAS VEGAS, NEVADA
The present Region IX laboratory uses 1,800
square feet of a building that it co-locates with the
ORD and OAR in Las Vegas, Nevada (see page
54). The laboratory is considered less-than-ideal
in terms of the actual facility and its distance from
the Regional Offices in San Francisco. To redress
this issue, EPA is in the process of awarding a
contract to a developer to lease-construct a new
laboratory in the San Francisco East Bay area to
enable the region to operate in a more efficient
and integrated manner. The Region IX laboratory
has 13 Region IX employees.
TREASURE ISLAND:
SAN FRANCISCO
Region IX stages and trains for its field operations
personnel, particularly for Superfund, at the Navy
base on Treasure Island through an Interagency
Agreement with the Department of the Navy. This
often involves fitness training and teaching people
to don and work in moon suits. It will soon
incorporate some of the maintenance functions
for the Mobile Field Laboratory unit. The field
operations will move to a new 3,000 square foot
building soon, upon its being remodeled.
OTHER FACILITIES
Alameda, California:
1,590 square feet in a Federal building
South San Francisco, California:
7,253 square feet warehouse storage (Federal
Supply Warehouse)
Honolulu, Hawaii:
1,147 square feet for the Pacific Islands
Contact Office (Prince Kuhio Federal Building)
Las Vegas, Nevada:
12,000 square feet warehouse storage (Build-
ing #5)
TOTAL REGION
Occupants
Square Feet
824
139,515
22
-------
Regional Office: San Francisco, CA
211 Main Street
Regional Office: San Francisco, CA
215 Fremont Street
23
-------
REGION X
REGIONAL OFFICE:
SEATTLE, WASHINGTON
Region X encompasses the states of Alaska,
Idaho, Oregon and Washington. Regional X and
the EPA Office of Investigations/OECM-NEIC are
located in the Park Place Building, as are two
other Federal agencies. The Park Place Building
is approximately 15 years old and remains in good
condition. An on-site Federal day care center
supports the personnel needs of the three Federal
tenants in the building. The landlord's responsive-
ness to tenant needs is an asset of the present
location. Region X is acquiring additional space
at the Park Place building in February to relieve
crowded conditions and to install a fitness center.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
1200 Sixth Avenue
GSA lease
458 EPA; 50 other
83,465
STATE OPERATIONS OFFICES
Anchorage, Alaska (2,672 square feet at the
Federal Building)
* Juneau, Alaska (1,700 square feet includes an
emergency response team)
* Boise, Idaho (4,955 square feet in Central
Washington Place)
Portland, Oregon (4,240 square feet in the
Executive building)
Olympia, Washington
REGIONAL LABORATORY:
MANCHESTER, WASHINGTON
The Region X laboratory is an excellent facility
located across Puget Sound from Seattle. The
number of on-site personnel has grown signifi-
cantly In recent years, in part because some
Washington State Department of Ecology per-
sonnel have begun to work there. Additionally,
Region X expects that its number of on-site
contractors will increase from 4 to 11. In order to
alleviate this situation, one portable has been
installed near the laboratory and two others are
planned. These will be used for office space,
freeing the laboratory to be utilized for research
purposes. The main area for improvement In the
facility is the upgrading of its ventilation systems,
which were installed many years ago prior to the
addition of many personnel and more demanding
equipment. The laboratory also has one storage
building, a wet lab, and a large concrete parking
area/helipad and pier into the bay that enables
boat docking.
Address
Arrangement
Square Feet
Occupants
7411 Beach Drive East
EPA owned
32,570
21 EPA; 4 Other
OTHER FACILITIES
Seattle, Washington:
5,420 square feet of warehouse storage (Fed-
eral Warehouse)
TOTAL REGION
Occupants
Square Feet
604
135,022
24
-------
Regional Office: Seattle, \\A
Alaska State Operations Office: Anchorage, AK
Washington State Operations Office: Olympia, Wft
Regional Laboratory: Manchester, V\A
25
-------
OFFICE OF ADMINISTRATION AND
RESOURCES MANAGEMENT
RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK,
NORTH CAROLINA
OARM is the sole EPA component and only
tenant in the Administration Building at Research
Triangle Park (RTP), North Carolina. This one-
story office building with a half basement houses
three OARM divisions that support RTP laboratory
functions; contracts, personnel, finance. Addition-
ally, OARM occupies 8,500 square feet of storage
at RTP at the Grand Slam Warehouse #2. OARM
is co-located with other EPA components in two
other RTP buildings (see page 56-57).
Building
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Administration Building
Alexander Drive
GSA lease
160
35,652
TOTAL (INCLUDES HEADQUARTERS)
Occupants *1,445
Square Feet *211,051
* does not include occupants or square footage
at co-located, non-headquarters facilities
OTHER OARM FACILITIES
Cincinnati, Ohio:
part of the Andrew W. Breidenbach Environ-
mental Research Center in Cincinnati, Ohio
(see page 58).
Norwood, Ohio:
10,899 square feet office space in the Norwood
Professional Building for 67 occupants
26
-------
Administration Buiding, Research Triangle Park, NC
Grand Slam Warehouse #2, Research Triangle Park, NC
27
-------
OFFICE OF AIR AND
RADIATION
EASTERN ENVIRONMENTAL RADIATION
LABORATORY:
MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA
The Eastern Environmental Radiation Laboratory
is a center devoted to radiation research, moni-
toring and analysis. It analyzes radioactive sam-
ples, tests and certifies radon kits, and is involved
with the international community. The laboratory
occupies small, World War tl-vintage buildings. A
new EPA owned facility is being constructed at
the Gunter Air Force Base in Montgomery,
Alabama to replace these buildings on land
transferred from the Air Force. It will have 56,000
square feet and approximately 80 work stations.
The new building is scheduled to be completed
in June 1989. There are 44 occupants in the
present laboratory facilities.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Gunter Air Force Base
EPA owned
44
56,000
MOTOR VEHICLE EMISSIONS LABORATORY:
ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN
OAR's unique Motor Vehicle Emissions Labora-
tory works closely with automobile manufacturers
who sell motor vehicles in the U.S. The laboratory
was specifically designed for the EPA, built under
an EPA lease, and occupied beginning in 1971.
The building has been renovated in several areas
since: adding awing in 1976; and modifying to the
underground storage tanks to improve fuel han-
dling and meet safety standards. The laboratory
has conducted a study and is beginning to work
on the design of on-site underground alternative
fuel storage tanks. The government may be able
to buy the laboratory on a lease/purchase ar-
rangement in the 1990 budget.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
2565 Plymouth Road
EPA lease
323
131,400
ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING SYSTEMS
LABORATORY:
LAS VEGAS, NEVADA
The OAR and the ORD Environmental Monitoring
Systems Laboratory facilities are co-located on
or around the University of Nevada campus in Las
Vegas (see pages 36 and 54). OAR has 17 EPA
employees (full-time equivalents) and 10 others
on location.
RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK:
NORTH CAROLINA
The Office of Air and Radiation occupies 3
buildings at Research Triangle Park: the Environ-
mental Research Center Annex (shared with ORD
-- see page 56), the EML Building and the Mutual
Building.
EML Building
The one-story EML building is utilized by the
Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards
(OAQPS). It is the only laboratory operated by
OAQPS. This laboratory has a woodworking and
a metal working shop, which are used to construct
models used to study air movements. A pending
issue for the EML building is the present re-
negotiation of its lease.
28
-------
Eastern Environmental Radiation Laboratory:
Montgomery, AL
Motor Vehicle Emissions Laboratory: Ann Arbor, Ml
EML Building, Research Triangle Park, NC
29
-------
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Page Road and Interstate
40
GSA lease
12
9,300
Mutual Building
The Mutual Building in downtown Durham, North
Carolina houses the offices of OAQPS on the fifth
through tenth floors. EPA is one of two tenants in
this building. As with other EPA facilities at RTF,
the landlords (in this case, North Carolina Mutual
Life), are generally responsive to the needs of
their tenants. Clearly, this facility support is an
asset to the smooth functioning of program
functions at RTP.
TOTAL (INCLUDES HEADQUARTERS)
Occupants *1,167
Square Feet *308,467
* does not include square footage at co-located
non-headquarters facilities
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
411 Chapel Hill Street
GSA lease
333
58,122
OTHER FACILITIES
Denver, Colorado:
space granted by NEIC for 9 EPA employees
and 1 AARP who work on enforcement and
compliance
Mutual BuMng, Research Triangle Park, NC
30
-------
OFFICE OF ENFORCEMENT AND
COMPLIANCE MONITORING
NATIONAL ENFORCEMENT INVESTIGATION
CENTER
The National Enforcement Investigation Center
(NEIC) have been located at the Denver Federal
Center in Lakewood, Colorado. The NEIC has
been located there since its 1971 formation as
an EPA component. The unique characteristic of
the NEIC lies in its sole dedication to enforcement-
related work across all EPA media. The center
consists of a laboratory group that performs a
variety of environmental analysis; field investiga-
tions personnel; technical personnel to develop,
provide enforcement case support; a criminal
investigations group that pursues possible crimi-
nal case development; and civil investigators. The
109 NEIC employees report to the NEIC Director,
who reports to the Office of and Enforcement
Compliance Monitoring.
The buildings at the Federal Center are of 1940s
vintage. Buildings 53 and 45 are being altered to
provide the main NEIC offices by consolidating
functions currently housed in those two buildings
plus buildings 46 and 55. A warehouse at 12th
and Quail streets in Lakewood, approximately 2
miles from the Federal Center, contains field
equipment, mobile laboratories, and a staff to
maintain these items.
Aside from the 109 EPA and 35 other NEIC
personnel at the Denver Federal Center, other
on-site personnel include 58 EPA employees and
51 contractors from Region VIII and 13 from
OPTS.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
EPA-NEIC, Building 53 Box
25227
space assignment in
Federal buildings
109 EPA; 35 others (NEIC
only)
73,314 (includes Region VII,
excludes joint-use space)
TOTAL (INCLUDES HEADQUARTERS)
Occupants 308
Square Feet 102,314
National Enforcement Center (NEIC)
Lakewood, CO
31
-------
OFFICE OF THE
INSPECTOR GENERAL
While the Office of the Inspector General is
usually co-located with other EPA components, it
alone represents the ERA at the following loca-
tions:
Sacramento, California
Seattle, Washington
Office Office of Criminal Audits
Address 1111 Third Avenue
Arrangement GSA lease
Occupants 1 EPA
Square Feet 1,240
Office
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Office of Audits
801 I Street Room 466
space assignment in
Federal building
7 EPA
1,319
TOTAL (INCLUDES HEADQUARTERS)
Occupants *134
Square Feet *40,299
* does not include occupants and square feet at
co-located, non-headquarters facilities
Atlanta, Georgia
Office
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Division Inspectors General
for Audit and Investigations
1375 Peachtree Street NE,
Suite 276
GSA lease
28 EPA; 4 other
5,965
New York, New York
Office Divisional Inspector General
for Investigations and Office
of Audit
Address 90 Church Street,
Rooms 804B & 802
Occupants 17 EPA
Square Feet 3,733
Chicago, Illinois
Office
Address
Occupants
Square Feet
Divisional Inspectors
General for Audit and
Investigations
10 West Jackson
Boulevard, Room 480
30 EPA; 2 other
8,082
32
-------
33
-------
OFFICE OF PESTICIDES AND
TOXIC SUBSTANCES
ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY LABORATORY
(BIOLOGICAL AND ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
DIVISION):
BELTSVILLE, MARYLAND
The Analytical Chemistry Laboratory utilizes two
buildings and a garage within the USDA Beltsville
Agricultural Research Center. EPA has been
located in Beltsville since its creation in 1970,
acquiring space from the USDA and the FDA.
OPTS has streamlined its Beltsville operations in
the last five years, reducing its occupancy by 12
buildings. The first floor of Building 306 is being
renovated. Air conditioning should be completed
by June. The painting, flooring etc. is scheduled
to be completed by the end of 1989. The few
chemists remaining in other buildings will be
moved to this building once the renovation is
complete.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Special
Functions
Building 306, ARC East
use permit with the
Department of Agriculture
21
10,000
chemical analysis of
pesticides and related
chemicals
ENVIRONMENTAL CHEMISTRY LABORATORY:
BAY SAINT LOUIS, MISSISSIPPI
The Environmental Chemistry Laboratory in Bay
Saint Louis utilizes laboratory and storage space
in buildings located on the NASA Stennis Space
Center. Those buildings were constructed in
1965, renovated in 1970, and the vent exhaust
system was upgraded two years ago. The Bay
Saint Louis facility is considered to be in excellent
condition.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Special
Functions
Building 1105 and storage
space shared with NASA
Interagency agreement with
NASA
18 EPA; 8 other
9,600
support National Pesticide
Groundwater Survey water
and pesticide programs, as
well as the dioxin and
pesticide food tolerance
programs
TOTAL (INCLUDES HEADQUARTERS)
Occupants
Square Feet
1,480 (includes 13 at
Denver Federal Center)
218,762
34
-------
Anaytical Chemistry Laboratory, BelUville, MD
Environmental Chemistry Laboratory, Bay Saint Louis, MS
35
-------
OFFICE OF RESEARCH
AND DEVELOPMENT
Information on ORD headquarters offices and
pertinent data regarding the facilities housing their
respective laboratories and field sites under their
organizational direction follow. Co-located labora-
tories are identified organizationally in this sec-
tion, and their facilities information summarized
on pages 54-58.
OFFICE OF MODELING, MONITORING
SYSTEMS AND QUALITY ASSURANCE
Environmental Monitoring Systems Laboratory:
Las Vegas, Nevada
The OBD Environmental Monitoring Systems
Laboratory (EMSL) and the Office of Air and
Radiation facilities are co-located on or around
buildings leased from the University of Nevada in
Las Vegas (UNLV). ORD also leases 12,000
square feet of warehouse space at Building
Number 5. The laboratory is installing a sprinkler
system and other safety features. Refer to page
54 for further details on the Las Vegas facilities.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Special
Functions
P.O. Box15027
EPA lease
185
89,595 (ORD space)
develop and demonstrate
multi-media monitoring
systems and techniques,
including the use of aerial
imagery.
Environmental Photographic Interpretation
Center:
Warrenton, Virginia (field site of EMSL, Las
Vegas)
EPA has utilized this Army facility at Vint Hill
Farms Station since 1973 to acquire and interpret
overhead imagery (i.e. remote sensing) in support
of environmental monitoring and enforcement
objectives (e.g. to trace pollution sources). The
facility is in excellent condition, with the exception
of the outdated mechanical systems. In addition,
it is in close proximity to airports.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Special
Functions
P.O. Box 1587, Building
166
use permit from the
Department of the Army
7 EPA; 40 other
22,250
overhead imagery
Environmental Monitoring Systems Laboratory:
Cincinnati, Ohio
The Environmental Monitoring Systems Labora-
tory (EMSL) is co-located with other EPA activities
at the Andrew W. Bridenbach Environmental
Research Center (/WVBERC) in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Refer to page 58 for information on the A/VBERC
facilities.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Special
Functions
26 West Martin Luther King
Drive
EPA owned
82 EPA; 38 other
27,370 (ORD space)
establish chemical and
biological methods for
environmental assessments
36
-------
Environmental Monitoring Systems Liboratory:
Las Vegas, NV
Environmental Photographic Interpretation Center:
Warrenton, VA
-------
Atmospheric Research and Exposure
Assessment Laboratory:
Research Triangle Park, North Carolina
The Atmospheric Research and Exposure As-
sessment Laboratory (AREAL) is co-located with
other EPA activities at the Environmental Re-
search Center (ERC) in RTP, North Carolina (refer
to page 56-57).
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Special
Functions
Alexander Drive
EPA lease
182 EPA; 178 other
129,434 (ORD space)
quantification of ambient
air pollution levels
OFFICE OF ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING
AND TECHNOLOGY DEMONSTRATION
Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory:
Cincinnati, Ohio
The Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory (RREL)
is co-located with other EPA activities at the
Andrew W. Breidenbach Environmental Research
Center (AWBERC) in Cincinnati, Ohio (refer to
page 58). Information on its four field sites follows.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Special
Functions
26 West Martin Luther King
Drive
EPA owned
219 EPA; 98 Other
70,250 (ORD space)
provide engineering
expertise in drinking water,
hazardous wastes,
pesticides, Superfund,
toxics, and wastewater
Edison, New Jersey:
(field site of RREL, Cincinnati)
ORD co-occupies five buildings, two storage
facilities, and numerous trailers at an abandoned
military base in Edison, New Jersey with the Office
of Solid Waste and Emergency Response
(OSWER), and the Region IIESD. The appropria-
tion for fiscal year 1988 provided for extensive
renovation of this facility (see page 55 for a
complete description of the Edison facilities). ORD
has 25 EPA personnel and 58 contractors at
Edison.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Special
Functions
Woodbridge Avenue
EPA owned
25 EPA; 58 others
411,500 (includes co-
located activities)
research and development
for the prevention, control
and abatement of multi-
media pollution
38
-------
39
-------
Center Hill lest and Evaluation Facility:
Cincinnati, Ohio (field site of RREL,
Cincinnati)
The Center Hill facility occupies a 16-acre site 10
miles from downtown Cincinnati. It consists of a
main laboratory/office buiiding and a laboratory
building and trailer. The Center Hill facility was
specifically designed to test solid waste. The
remote location is ideal for specialized pilot scale
research. However, Center Hill lacks adequate
hazardous material handling/disposal facilities.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Special
Functions
5995 Center Hill Avenue
EPA owned facility on land
leased from the University
of Cincinnati
33 total
13,009
testing of solid waste
lest and Evaluation Facility:
Cincinnati, Ohio (field site of RREL,
Cincinnati)
The Test and Evaluation Facility occupies a
one-acre site located at the Mill Creek wastewater
treatment plant one mile west of downtown
Cincinnati. The facility is located in an excellent,
highly specialized building that was constructed
in 1978 for pilot water projects.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Special
Functions
1600 Gest Street
EPA owned building on
leased land
10 EPA; 41 other
32,000
determine the efficacy of
wastewater treatment
processes by tapping
treated and untreated
sewage
Newtown Fish Toxicology Station:
Newtown, Ohio (field site of RREL,
Cincinnati)
The ORD co-occupies two connected buildings
at the 2.6 acre Newtown Fish Toxicology Station
with the Office of Water (OW). One of the
buildings was constructed in the 1950s, the other
was built in 1972. The station features fish ponds
and hatcheries.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Special
Functions
3411 Church Street
EPA owned
27 total
10,901
examine the impacts of
introduced substances
upon freshwater organisms
40
-------
Center Hill Test and Evaluation Facility:
Cincinnati, OH
Text and Evaluation Facility:
1600 Gest Street, Cincinnati, OH
Newtown Fish Toxicology Station:
Newtown, OH
41
-------
Air and Energy Engineering Research
Laboratory:
Research Triangle Park, North Carolina
The Air and Energy Engineering Research Labo-
ratory (AEERL) is co-located with other EPA
activities at the Environmental Research Center
(ERC) in RTF, North Carolina (refer to page
56-57).
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Special
Functions
Alexander Drive
EPA lease
102 EPA; 43 other
47,422 (ORD space)
develop and demonstrate
methods and technologies
for controlling air pollution
from stationary sources
OFFICE OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROCESSES
AND EFFECTS RESEARCH
Environmental Research Laboratory:
Gulf Breeze, Florida
This laboratory consists of 30 buildings on a
16-acre, Federally owned island connected by a
causeway to Pensacola Beach, Florida. Four of
the buildings, constructed in masonry, are rela-
tively new and are used for toxicology and
biotechnology research. Santa Rosa Sound pro-
vides an unlimited source of clean, natural salt
water for use in marine research. A 10,000 square
foot biotechnology research laboratory is planned
for construction in fiscal year 1988-89. The
remaining buildings are of wood construction,
several of which are included in a state registry
of historical resources, and most are in fair to
poor condition. They require constant mainte-
nance due to the marine climate.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Special
Functions
Sabine Island
EPA owned
67 EPA; 64 other
60,350 (includes the new
Biotech Building)
biotechnology risk
assessment, marine
ecology and toxicology,
microbial ecology, bio-
degradation of toxic
chemicals, pathology of
marine organisms
42
-------
Environmental Research Laboratory:
Gulf Breeze, FL
43
-------
Environmental Research Laboratory:
Athens, Georgia
Opened in 1966, the EPA ORD's main laboratory
facility in Athens, GA consists of a main laboratory
facility with four annexes (library-auditorium, two
office buildings, and an analysis laboratory). The
facilities are situated on 12 acres of a research
park near the University of Georgia, approxi-
mately 80 miles from Atlanta. Although beginning
to show its age, the laboratory functions well as
a research facility because it is kept up-to-date
with state-of-the-art chemical analysis equipment.
The facility has become increasingly overcrowded
with the addition of new ORD and contract
personnel, and the allocation of space for Region
IV ESD. Major facility needs include an additional
laboratory building for bench scientists and ad-
ministrative staff, a hazardous waste storage
facility, and a structure for personnel during
storms at an annex located about 1 mile from the
main laboratory. The EPA Center for Exposure
Assessment Modeling (CEAM) is the Agency's
national center of expertise for state-of-the-art
exposure assessment technology for environ-
mental risk based decisions. CEAM distributes
models, trains users, provides expert problem-
solving advice, and participates in conducting
priority investigations.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Special
Functions
960 College Station Road
EPA owned
83 EPA ORD; 68 ORD
other; 127 Region IV
62,680
research concerning
pollutants in water, soil,
and sediments
Environmental Research Laboratory:
Duluth, Minnesota
The ORD Environmental Research Laboratory
(ERL) in Duluth occupies a 13.2 acre site within
300 feet of the shore of Lake Superior. The
complex consists of a two-story main laboratory
building designed and constructed in the mid-
1960s to be a water quality laboratory, a two-story
research annex, field gear storage barn, a
hazardous waste storage building, and two office
annex trailers. The buildings are in good condi-
tion. The location is proximate to a source of
clean, untreated fresh water enables the labora-
tory to support the aquatic toxicology program
well.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Special
Functions
6201 Congdon Boulevard
EPA owned
104 EPA; 130 Other
86,828
study conventional,
hazardous and toxic
pollutants In fresh water
ecosystems
44
-------
Environmental Research Laboratory: Athens, GA
Environmental Research Laboratory: Duluth, MN
45
-------
Large Lakes Research Station:
Grosse lie, Michigan (field site of ERL,
Duluth)
The Large Lakes Research Station on Grosse lie,
Michigan in the Detroit River is co-located with the
Region V Emergency Response Team (see page
14), The facility consists of a well-constructed
two-story masonry building, two brick outer build-
ings, a steel hanger and parking. The site also
has wetlands and a quarry pond. Overall, the site
and buildings are appropriate for laboratory
functions. The laboratory was renovated in 1970.
Asbestos removal was recently completed out-
side the main laboratory. Installation of state-of-the-
art chemical laboratories with hood systems to
remove solvents and toxics is scheduled for
completion the summer of 1989. The facility is in
an excellent location for conducting lake-wide
water quality research in the Great Lakes, its
major projects involve multilateral, multiagency
work on toxic substance discharges under the
terms of water quality agreements with Canada,
and of the Clean Water Act The proposed
utilization of 40 acres for wetland preservation and
an environmental learning center in support of
EPA wetlands initiatives is receiving strong state
and local support.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Special
Functions
9311 Groh Road
EPA owned
7 EPA, 1 other
35,370
only EPA laboratory to
support water analysis at
ultra-trace levels in the
Great Lakes
Montlcello Ecological Research Station: Mon-
tlcello, Minnesota (field site of ERL, Duluth)
The Monticello Ecological Research Station occu-
pies a 30-acre site adjacent to a nuclear generat-
ing plant and the Mississippi River, 45 miles
northwest of Minneapolis. The complex consists
of a main laboratory building and several small
auxiliary and temporary buildings. Generally, the
buildings are in good to fair condition. The
complex has pumps to move Mississippi River
water into individual control streams in dose-
response experiments.
Address Box 500
Arrangement EPA owned buildings on
leased site
Occupants 8
Square Feet 28,100
Special eight 1,800-foot outdoor
Functions experimental mesocosms to
conduct controlled outdoor
experiments on freshwater
aquatic life
Robert S. Kerr Environmental Research
Laboratory:
Ada, Oklahoma
The Robert S. Kerr Environmental Research
Laboratory in Ada, Oklahoma occupies a 4-story
main laboratory building, a temporary hazardous
waste storage building, an explosion proof build-
ing, and a shop/storage building on a 16-acre site.
The laboratory also operates a pilot-scale re-
search field site three miles north of Ada. Overall,
the facility is a well-designed, functional and
flexible laboratory with systems that have been
well maintained (the main laboratory building was
constructed in 1965). A permanent hazardous
waste storage building is under construction.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Special
Functions
P.O. Box 1198
EPA owned
61 EPA; 55 other
60,096
research on the transport
and transformation of
contaminants in soil and
groundwater
46
-------
Large Lakes Research Station: Grosse lie, Ml
Roberts. Kerr Environmental Research Laboratory:
Ada, OK
47
-------
Environmental Research Laboratory:
Corvallls, Oregon
The Environmental Research Laboratory Corval-
lis, Oregon is located on the Oregon State
University Campus. The site contains a 2-story
laboratory building constructed in 1966, a haz-
ardous waste storage building, a terrestrial ecol-
ogy facility with greenhouses (added in 1975), and
an extensive complex of plant exposure cham-
bers. Overall, the site and the buildings support
the laboratory functions very well. The main
building is well-designed, and the additional site
facilities have extended its capabilities. An off-site
building that previously housed the Western Fish
Toxicology Station is being remodeled to perform
biotechnology and wildlife research. Additionally,
an on-site contractor to the laboratory leases
approximately 19,000 square feet of office space,
about one mile from the main laboratory. GSA is
currently evaluating bids for 18,000 square feet
of office space to replace this space, with
occupancy expected in the fall of 1989.
Environmental Research
Narragansett, Rhode Island
Laboratory:
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Special
Functions
Southwest 35th Street
EPA owned
88 EPA; 190 other
108,523
develop and evaluate
methods for assessing the
effects of pollutants and
other environmental
stresses in the terrestrial
environment.
The 11-acre Environmental Research Laboratory
in Narragansett is located on the Western shore
of Narragansett Bay. This laboratory and its field
station in Newport, Oregon (below) are the
Agency centers for marine, coastal and estuarine
water quality research. The complex consists of
a three-story main laboratory building, a hazard-
ous waste storage building, a storage building,
two small utility buildings, a containment labora-
tory, clean rooms, and the EPA-operated Sea
Urchin Day Care Center. The present facility in
Narragansett is considered a state-of-the-art
aquatic research facility and is in overall excellent
condition. Adjacent to the laboratory are the
University of Rhode Island Bay Campus and
NOAA's National Marine Fisheries Service Re-
search Laboratory. The laboratory is located
approximately 30 miles south of the capital city
of Providence.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Special
Functions
South Ferry Road
EPA owned
78 EPA; 74 Other
70,200
marine, coastal and
estuarine water quality
research
48
-------
Environmental Research Laboratory: Corvallis, OR
Environmental Research Laboratory: Narragansett, Rl
49
-------
Environmental Research Station:
Newport, Oregon (field site ERL,
Narragansett)
The Environmental Research Center is located
at the 40-acre Hatfield Marine Science Center,
operated by the Oregon State University. The
rural location proximate to a high quality supply
of seawater under flow through conditions is ideal
for its marine research. The laboratory occupies
one wing of a building constructed in 1965, and
a storage facility. A replacement facility and library
are being constructed to alleviate difficulties with
the present site. Groundbreaking occurred on
April 1,1989. ORD also leases 2,320 square feet
of warehouse storage at the Newport Industrial
Park.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Special
Functions
Marine Science Drive
EPA lease
24 EPA; 15 other
18,000
research related to marine
pollution and management
of waste discharges into
the marine environment.
Carolina and leased by EPA. Associated with
HERL, its Clinical Studies Branch is located in
7,935 square feet of Building C on the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill campus. A new
laboratory to replace Building C will be con-
structed within the next four years. Additionally,
the Kron Building houses spillover personnel from
Building C in 1,780 square feet of office space at
725 Airport Road. The Toxicology and Microbiol-
ogy Division of HERL is located at the A/VBERC
in Cincinnati, Ohio (see page 58 for information
on the /WBERC facilities.)
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Special
Functions
Alexander Drive
EPA Lease
300 EPA; 216 other
119,777 (ORD space)
provide the basis for health-
related decisions of the
Agency and possesses one
of the Nation's few
sophisticated human
inhalation exposure facilities
OFFICE OF HEALTH RESEARCH
Health Effects Research Laboratory:
Research Triangle Park, North Carolina
The Health Effects Research Laboratory (HERL)
reports to the Office of Health Research, which is
responsible for planning, implementing, and evalu-
ating a comprehensive, integrated human health
research program. HERL is co-located with other
EPA activities at the Environmental Research
Center (ERC) in RTP, North Carolina (see page
56 for complete details on ERC facilities). Mobile
units are parked outside the building. Design for
a replacement facility has begun. The facility
would be constructed by the University of North
50
-------
Other ORD Facilities at Research Triangle
Park, North Carolina
Various ORO offices occupy all or part of eight
buildings within Research Triangle Park. The five
in which the ORD is the sole EPA component are
listed below, the others in which ORD occupies
are discussed on page 56-57.
* Catawba Building:
37,301 square feet office space for ORD
administrative personnel (210 Chapel Hill-
Nelson)
Camio Building:
2,139 square feet laboratory space in govern-
ment-owned buildings on leased land (South
Mangum Street)
Booth Warehouse:
5,600 square feet storage (South Alston Ave-
nue)
TOTAL (INCLUDES HEADQUARTERS)
Occupants
Square Feet
3,696
Buidling C, Health Effects Research Laboratory:
Research Triangle Park, NC
Kron Building, Health Effects Research Laboratory:
Research Triangle Park, NC
Camio Buidling, Research Triangle Park, NC
Catawba Buidling, Research Triangle Park, NC
51
-------
OFFICE OF SOLED WASTE AND
EMERGENCY RESPONSE
The Office of Solid Waste and Emergency
Response (OSWER), the Office of Research and
Development and Region II ESD co-occupy five
buildings, two storage facilities, and numerous
trailers at an abandoned military base in Edison,
New Jersey (see page 55 for complete descrip-
tion). OSWER's Emergency Response Team
(ERT) at Edison, New Jersey is the focal
22-member point of the national spill containment
and hazardous substances emergency cleanup
effort. The ERT trains response personnel through
simulations of environmental emergencies at the
approximately 160 EPA-owned acres in Edison.
Also, the ERT and the ORD in Edison operate a
fleet of large trailer-mounted hazardous waste
response equipment (such as four mobile labora-
tories}, which is housed in old abandoned ware-
houses. Further, the Environmental Technology
and Engineering Facility Project plans to rehabili-
tate portions of buildings 245 and 246. This would
provide new ERT laboratories and ORD facilities
for testing and evaluating new hazardous waste
treatment methods in direct support of the ERT.
In sum, the facilities at Edison support OSWER
activities well.
TOTAL (INCLUDES HEADQUARTERS)
Occupants 852
Square Feet *110,000
* excludes square footage at Edison, New Jersey
52
-------
OFFICE OF WATER
PROGRAMS
The Technical Support Division of the Office of
Drinking Water uses 3,795 square feet of office
space, 3,990 square feet of laboratory space and
575 square feet of structurally changed space in
the Andrew W. Breidenbach Environmental Re-
search Center in Cincinnati, Ohio (see page 58).
There are 29 EPA FTEs and 7 others at
Breidenbach.
TOTAL (INCLUDES HEADQUARTERS)
Ocsupants
Square Feet
760
102,360
53
-------
LAS VEGAS, NEVADA
FACILITIES
EPA facilities in Las Vegas are located on or
around the University of Nevada campus in Las
Vegas, Nevada. They include four buildings on
campus, one off-site building and a modular office
complex. The following EPA groups are co-
located within these facilities: ORD Environmental
Monitoring Systems Laboratory, OAR, OARM
(Financial Management, Civil Rights, Personnel),
and a few Region IX employees. Most of these
buildings were built in 1966 and remain in fair to
good condition. Once the lease expires in 1995,
it is proposed that the laboratory be moved to a
new facility. The laboratory is in the process of
installing a sprinkler system and providing addi-
tional safety features in the present site.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Special
Functions
RO. Box 15027
EPA lease
473
143,640
develop guidance on
standardization and quality
assurance aspects of
radiation, hazardous waste,
toxic substances and
groundwater pesticides;
provide off-site monitoring
and surveillance services
around nuclear weapons
testing sites and sites of
environmental emergencies
Las Vegas, NV Facilities
54
-------
EDISON, NEW JERSEY
FACILITIES
Region II operates the 180 acre EPA Edison
Facility which supports Regional ESD and Emer-
gency Remedial Response Division staff, the
Releases Control Branch of ORD's Cincinnati
Environmental Research Center and OSWER's
National Environmental Response Team. The
facility also houses approximately 183 contract
personnel. A major $5.6 million ORD Superfund
Program Testing and Evaluation laboratory to
evaluate innovative hazardous waste cleanup
technologies has been authorized by Congress
for construction at Edison. Presently EPA per-
sonnel occupy five buildings on site. Two addi-
tional buildings will be partially renovated as part
of the projected ORD Superfund laboratory. The
buildings were constructed during the period of
approximately 1910 to 1957 on an Army base.
The buildings have been transferred from the
US. Army, to the GSA, and then to the EPA. A
regional laboratory is planned to be built at the
Edison site.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Scuare Feet
Woodbridge Avenue
EPA owned
197 EPA; 183 Contractors
411,500
Edison, NJ Facility
55
-------
RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, NC
FACILITIES
EPA facilities at Research Triangle Park represent
the single largest complex of laboratories in the
Agency, accounting for 30 percent of the EPA's
laboratory space. The Agency leases space in
twelve separate facilities in the Research Triangle
Park, Durham and Chapel Hill areas for a total of
579,536 gross square feet. The personnel at
these facilities are responsive to program areas/
offices of three EPA branches: the Office of
Research and Development, the Office for Air and
Radiation, and the Office of Administration and
Resource Management. A detailed facility and
long term planning study was conducted on this
Environmental Research Center in 1984. The
RTP buildings shared by several program offices
are listed below (those specifically assigned to
one program office are discussed in their respec-
tive sections).
Environmental Research Center (OARM &
ORD)
The Environmental Research Center (ERG) was
constructed to government specifications ap-
proximately 1970 by the Department of Health,
Education and Welfare (later renamed the De-
partment of Health and Human Services). The
building was subsequently turned over to EPA,
which has continued to occupy it since as its sole.
tenant. Several renovations have been completed
in the last year, notably the conversion of office
to laboratory space to meet the great need for
additional laboratory space. ERC is home to
EPA's National Computer Center. The center
facilities are specially designed to meet the
necessary requirements; featuring raised floors,
round-the-clock temperature-monitored areas and
specialized ventilation systems. ERC also houses
three ORD laboratories: HERL, AEERL, and
AREAL.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Alexander Drive and
Highway 54
EPA lease
600
253,390
Environmental Research Center Annex (OAR
&ORD)
The Environmental Research Center Annex houses
additional laboratory space for researchers of the
three ORD laboratories at the ERC (above). The
annex space is considered adequate for the
laboratory functions. It has undergone no major
renovations. EPA is the single tenant at the ERC
annex.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Alexander Drive
EPA lease
220
119,703
Fluid Modeling Facility-Grand Slam Racquet
Club (OARM & ORD)
The Fluid Modeling Facility at the Grand Slam
Racquet Club (the building was initially erected
to be indoor tennis club) is used for warehouse
operations in one half the building. The other half
the building is used for fluid modeling operations
of the AREAL (ORD). The building has a very
targe wind tunnel and a water channel, which are
both about half the length of the building. The
tunnel and channel are used to model air and
water currents using dyes to make projections
based upon test results. The original synthetic
flooring material on the ORD portion was recently
removed due to buckling, so that now the flooring
consists of the underlying concrete.
56
-------
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
Page Road and Interstate
40
GSA lease
45
40,654
RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK TOTAL
Occupants
Square Feet
865
413,747
Environmental Research Center
Research Triangle Park, NC
Fluid Modeling Facility
Research Triangle Park, NC
57
-------
CINCINNATI, OfflO
FACILITIES
OARM, ORD, OW and the Office of Civil Rights
are co-located in the EPA-owned Andrew W.
Breidenbach Environmental Research Center
(AVBERC) in Cincinnati, Ohio. The building was
designed and constructed as a laboratory. The
entire complex except for the second floor is
laboratory space-the second floor is office space.
The building features modular 10-foot by 23-foot
segments, which can be moved to expand or
contract individual laboratories. It also has a
280-seat auditorium. The completion of a fitness
center and a day care center at the site is
scheduled for 1989.
Address
Arrangement
Occupants
Square Feet
26 West Martin Luther King
Drive
EPA owned
802
266,641 (net usable} plus
3,404 FCF
OTHER FACILITIES
* 31,250 square feet for Publications and Distri-
bution contractor (CD1 Warehouse)
Andrew W. Breidenbach Evnironmental Research Center
Cincinnati, OH
58
-------
ACRONYMS
AARP American Association of Retired Persons employees
AEERL Air and Energy Engineering Research Laboratory
AO Office of the Administrator
AREAL Atmospheric Research and Assessment Laboratory
AWBERC Andrew W. Breidenbach Environmental Research Center
CEAM Center for Exposure Assessment Modeling
CERCLA Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act
EMSL Environmental Monitoring Systems Laboratory
ESD Environmental Services Division
FDA Food and Drug Administration
FTE Full Time Equivalent
HERL Health Effects Research Laboratory
GSA Genera) Services Administration
IAG Interagency Agreement
National Aeronautic and Space Administration
National Enforcement Investigation Center
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
of the Administrator
of Air and Radiation
of Administration and Resources Management
of External Affairs
of Enforcement and Compliance Monitoring
of Environmental Engineering and Technology Demonstration
of General Counsel
of the Inspector General
of Modeling, Monitoring Systems and Quality Assurance
of Policy, Planning and Evaluation
of Pesticides and Toxic Substances
of Research and Development
of Solid Waste and Emergency Response
of Water
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
Stay in School (student employees)
United States Department of Agriculture
NASA
NEIC
NOAA
OA
OAR
OARM
OEA
OECM
OEETD
OGC
OIG
OMMSQA
OPPE
OPTS
ORD
OSWER
OW
RCRA
RREL
SIS
USDA
Nation
Nation
Nation
Office
Office
Office
Office
Office
Office
Office '
Office
Office
Office i
Office i
Office i
Office i
Office i
Resoui
RiskB
Stay in
United
59
-------
60
-------
APPENDICES
61
-------
2
v>
CO
ee
UJ
41
0)
at
0>
o
.£
5
CO
1
* 1
« 1
« 1
* 1
* 1
s :
u- 1
1
1
1
1
2
i_
O>
-
_ _
1
1
* 1
I \
II
1- 1
1
1
1
1
1
1_ 1
to i
.c l
*> 1
O 1
1
c* 1
1
UJ 1
1 1
u- 1
1
1
1
* 1
* 1
L. 1
to 1
.C 1
o !
i
i
i
* i
UJ 1
1 I
u- 1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
j
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
!
a i
2 1
1
1
i
<
1
1
1
1
4
1
1
1
J
1
1
1
1
1
!
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
u
Q
§
4-»
Dl
C
(0
ID
3
if
IB
E
O
o
r-
(d
«-
4)
4-f
ID
O
LTt
g
O
0>
£
U
5
0
^
8
*-
O
e
o
in
e
o
in
^
1
§
c/>
Jj
£
o
s*
^
«
U
Q
g
4-*
g
^
CA
3
s
4>
<
C3
(U
U
o
s
to
«
^
ttJ
3
*-*
1
*-»
Si
1_
(/I
o
Q.
ID
U
£
Q
$
-a-
§
g
L.
W
ro
rvi
llllllllf.
Z
2
CA
L.
O E
^ |
0 1
s
«-
01
0)
<
t3
01
o
*-
o
o
M
*O
>.
JI
O)
"-
^
^
>
(D
0
g
cn
01
H-
t-
01
-a
f
ro
i
gj
(B
^4"
W
IM
^n
.
!
1
1
1
|
1
|
1
1
1
1
1
1
I
i "£
i eo
i in
I -O
i
i
i
i
i
i
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
I
f
1
1
I
I
I
1
1
1
1
1
1
a
1 4-*
I 0
(D
«J
-------
§
O) ^
U ""J
69 P
a o
£
LI
5
*
ac
at
3
O
1
1
1
f 1
S i
1
1
1
1
1
« 1
IU 1
t- 1
U. 1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
g i
u- W 1
ID 1
'5 z !
to i
1
1
!
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
|
i
CO O
o> o
o «
in oS
F- ru
'
IU o>
to o>
a a
o> v
_^ ^^
U U
£ £
«- V-
o o
7
SP*I
o
Kl «-
_
0 st
» M
CO O>
t*\ ^
?
-
o
'5 <
ca x
c
a o
L. >->
o o
§ £
in in
e>
at
II
O II
. t- n
S
ID
^_ ^_
i S
!!
u
N
n
n
n
n
n
O> tl fl
II K.
II
II
II
II
II
a
u
n
n
ci
M
# n *-
r- n -ft
n in
u
u
n
n
n
n
n
u
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
u
u
n
II
u
n
II
II
n
II
n
ii
n
n
ii
ii
u
< ii
X II
M
g '!
4-> II
1
Sll
II
-1 U
.,;
o
4-*
a
t- II
o II
1 !!
-i H
4-* II
41 II
§4> II
L. II
4" II
I/I II
O> II
41 X
tt 4)
TJ '> II
£ 4-1 II
a at n
-> 4) II
O> 3 II
C II
111 O II
3 * !! 2
41 HO
-------
(Q fll
"3 «|
cr u.
B
CO
o
in
Jig
II CM
II -»
II in
u
u
u
II
u
u
01
S
5
O
O
8
o
t-
l_
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
O O O 01
CO «- >» O
o
o
S. g
a.
UJ
g
o
a t* t>
UJ £
I *
u- O
-------
w
1- 4-1
O O>
V u-
la
t- ii
at o>
J3 >~
*
41
41
1
J*
>-
fc
^
4-1
a o
4J
o <*
h
QJ
(-
u-
*
fc
o
.
I
£1 :
1 1
u. t
1
1
1
j
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
a> i
C 1
' I |
m
i
i
i
i
!
i
i
in -* «-
!"*
at at vt at
n to to n
_ _ _ _,
at > co tn
b
01 O 0* Ot
U +> O ffl
w (0 1-
M- C_ H- O
o £ o at
a
i
i
in M> o o
i eo 5$ M
1 O>
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
O (M
in ca *
(\J-4-CM
N-
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
< a
a. a ac
JC
i ^ at
I = 5 1 i
» 'o a u c a.
a> fi. c 4-< a
13 to ._ u _ . c
a c a o c
C 0) 1. «* <
!c 4-* j= (o 3 a> -
01 X ~D 01 - C C
tn >- o o tn - 3 >'£
aiu94^iKC->£>-D
«4- 3 Q 4-» ' >
t-CjSB tSo*J
ow«ja)3-oi
U_I4-*CD'Q O I-O
a> at con)
fuovaaa at
-o loot.
^ «^ £ K- o ii N
>- <> (M II (M
- - II Kl
- II Kl
Knj
I
ii
u
ii
ii
ii
n
801 0> II
v) at u
a a o u
0) 01 0) 1
^ « ^
(/> M tf> II
O U 0 II
II
II
I
u a < "3 _ . 's n
* i ." ?
E !f! o m ^
s g? i p
! | i !: « ( 3
3 (NJ tl O
CD ro u i-
1
to
« s
C tl
* 5 J
-------
I
^ Ofi
a
5
2
u>
01
L.
ID
t
8
3
ID
O
1
g>
2
3
oa
I
4-*
8
u.
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
g 1
>*-
« 1
I!
>~ i
i
i
i
i
i
L. |
01 1
.C 1
V 1
0 1
1
»a i
i
UJ I
t- i
" !
!
1 I
t. i
0) 1
f 1
4-* 1
0 !
!
i
i
i
*
£ !
u.
1
i
sc
1
0
(ft
IB
4>
i
r
i
3
ID '
4*1
C
«" W
8 ?
i «
i »-
! t t
! > §
1 U
1
C \f>
.2 S
1 0>
1 4)
1 a:
8
3
01
(A
£
U
01
H-
o
^*
*
*
i
1
<3
u
z
£
ID
Of
1
3
in
1
g
<
UJ
fe
£
a
s
«) K1
< M
*«
O i
+J
£ "8
£ £
3 §
S £
o «
to
D)
0) 0)
<* ff
^ ^
(D
I- O
I"
S 3
03 r
0
3
7 4"'
c "3
x u
i*
2 5
111 <
c3 <3
2 2
5 S
a a
B
|5
'5
X CO
§ "5
< «
4, §
4) K
£ .
4-> CO
" -o
i? fe
' f
'S
en ae
S
Kl
0
U
b
U)
£
"
S
0
2
a
N.
I--
*~
C
|5
I
8
&
ts
«
GJ
U
O
u.
CO
2)
S
o
o
01
01
i
p>
L.
O
4-1
0)
O
s
0
f
4J
B
28
»- L.
3 4J
ED 0)
X
0)
i
S,
u
0
H-
«*
O
m
m
3
L.
1!
3
i- 0
«r s
« «
" s
It
4-> X
*i
_i
ik
?
<0
U
^
9
_l
1
j5
'5
m
IB
1
u.
o
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
« !
B) 1
SI
1
1
1
$ !
C9 1
0
-
*-
s
CM
CM
:
,
:
,
1
1
:
*
i
i
i
0
3
C
I
1
1
£
1
1 O
1 t-
I
i £
s
III
8 «r -
g g s
.2 t fe
u. c o.
ai to u
o » 3
"" c
0 .?
0 .
£ I I 1
* I
_
-------
a
ce
I
eu
e
i
5
§
1
j
4> 1
I- *> I
§ Si !
cr u- i
to i
.
i- i
O "-
CO O
3 1-
i
1
1
1
1
1
1
«
«
*«
O.
X
1-
1
I-
0)
JC
4-> 1
10 O 1
4J
0 «S
UJ
1 1
u- 1
1
L.
^
1
*
Ul
t-
|
1
1
!
i
I
1
I
I
I
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
o)
^
5 i
'5
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
1
a
i -
i 1 1
ederal Building, 1
Dearborn
1 u- JC
- 5
M O
IK CO
x o
' SB
_j
Building, Chicago
c
o
'E
3
in
5
CO
41
CO
a
01
(3
o>
*
fc
in
"O
£
y_
O
Jackson Boulevard
I
*"
O
0>
ffl
ce Building, Chic
H-
5
1
.
i
o
CO
o
41
H-
"o
g
IM
O
-J-
4->
S
4-»
(O
^<
L.
_0
u
f
«J
3
VI
^
H-
o
aza. West lake OH
(L
!
i_
*j
s?
00
£
01
3
C9
b
labor at
Ri
O
(M
(>j
.1
c_
01
4->
I
i^
X
01
aboratory, Grosse
_j
1
4>
U
1
o h* o Oji o O4 mi
O fM N O M CM Kl I
3 ~ - PI |
1
!
|
i
i
i
-n 41 01 1
9 CO CO D> M ID CO 1
c a) n i- o co co co i
Ul C9 (3 < C9 U C9 1
""* > 1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
£" 4) " 4) L" «l o o> 4> a> i
u a 4-» O *" H- 4-1 1
25 CO U> -D U O « 1
2 S |
i
>o o o o o M o i
-
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
IM ro i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
-*
«» i
i
i
i
i
i
i
]
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
!
i
i
O 0
'*3 o
4-> L.
a ^
c <
o ^
C 41
d 03
1 " III
. o 4-» 4) *D O
.C4jn)O| 3i CJ f4-»
Utiav C 4-- ii
Sou S3 4J 3 6
. i. .;- 4J > oa 4-> co 4i u
4->4JfCA < «)*4l34->
ocau "- Q u)
fi. CO O I- 4J
D4>.C ^*-4J^X> <*4^
5 o t v> $> at . s. 3 o w c - - -
-* O ^COO'OfS'Uu.
-§8:^15 S - i S * = *.
U3«JO3-lOa<03.c:3 3 4^ o«crt4-'Qai'*-*oooi i
am i
p c/» pi « TJ TJ i
t-
s
§
0
tv
T-
1
1
N.
in
*
(M
n*
S«*
«
1
1
1
1
l
l
1
1
l
l
1
4->
i* I U-
-------
UJ
I
3
01
3
l_
s
3
o
?
j5
'^
1
1
1
**
4)
0
i
4)
1
II
&
^_
t.
4)
£
o
»a
UJ
t
u.
*
«
u
41
O
*
UJ
t- 1
u- 1
1
1
1
,
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
i
x
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
X
t-
*
CD
O
£
T3
^
Al
C
erstate Ba
|
4-i
C
1 "I
-
Ifmrn
a
01
a
u
in
(3
4)
o
j»-
o
1
g
o
IE
i
X
1-
§
4-1
CO
z
2
o
£
t> a
3 _l
CO -
v) at
0 41
ae et
in *
-* O
^ l_
*~ C
41
U
S
in
«
in
S
ILt
O
eg
Q
£
a
5
o
X
1
s
CO
o
£
'5
m
CO
i.
1
u.
*
«
X
»
at
CO
CO
^
ng Bouleva
|
(M
m
.
i
i
O CO to CO
01 01 4) 01 1
fy Cjfl O U
'
41 "S "S
0) «l w <~ +« v
CO 0 f 1- JC. *-
L. *- O) M ID 4-*
O H- «" CO - 0)
to *o "Q "n
.- ..
O N. o ^ 3 M 3 !
1 - s s I * '
CD "5 C 41 VI 4T c- 1
t- 41 O 3 tt «>
g« > O 3 «/> 1
"P < t- Z O 1
41 H- .e * I
> u. .x o « g ra i
t- M (A 5 C 1
>- >> 3 * a «j co i
41 Of » 111 ffl O 1
-111 O 3 1
CM co in a. in o m
« O «- «- (M
KI in ^ -t
43 in c/>
o
m 3 3
0
«-
1 *
I V-*
1 IM
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
I
I
I
1 -
I
1
I
i
i
i
I
i
CM
S
CM
°
f1*-
1
[ _»
m
t>
i i
-i CO
h- 41
« 4J
ID
<«- 4-»
O 01
X
l_
o
CO
i
to
.3
t3
2
§
.1
4) C
CO §!
3 £ >. ~ «
O I i- U 4>
(rt u. ffl ,^3
O >s ^ CT
C ^ C. «
O» '^ 03
C TJ u. &
*- X
-------
0)
L. +1
CO 01
3 01
*""
CO
4> L.
W 01
^ 1
1
* 1
« 1
* 1
V 1
Q. j
X 1
t- i
i
i
i
1
1
L. ;
0> 1
f 1
^ 4-* ;
a O i
4-* I
O OB 1
H- l
Ul 1
1 1
u. 1
« 1
« 1
E_ 1
01 1
£ 1
o
1
1
1
1
1
1
« 1
1U 1
1- 1
u. 1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
j
1
O> 1
C 1
M- V 1
a !
'3 z 1
m l
l
l
i
l
l
l
i
i
i
i
i
l
l
l
l
l
l
l
l
l
i
i
l
I
o -o in o in
ft IM co a. co
PJ
c, 41 V
ai o cn o) 41 o>
u 4-> c ID u a
m L. i-
t- c. J* O *- O
o .a to co o «
as a.
*
O O O CM N
N- IM CM
* «-
O O (M N
CM CM
O
r-
.
i 0
>.
4- X
S c £
X C °
» co 4-« c ca
ej L u
x x a- c
4-* 4-» in H- ca
a «4- M
U V O CO 01 4'
3o) 2 c -^ -o
CO C 3 CD CO C. «-
x ^ ig>-
co > 01 e> 4J *c >
c<>O4J> - TD o r~- r- i o 3 xu xco ;
ii *-> u. tl v C M
ctMtMtMtg j: in - a t\l 41 - O CO ^ Ik
o>
£
ID
J~
w
1
c.
o
01
o
X
i
o
E
X
4^
O
cn
ca
g
ca
.if
^
1
1
CM
t^
a
^
S
8
H-
o
CM
O
41
*i
** 1
(A
i
i
i
i
*
%
o
m
e-
i
i
i
o
Q
i
CM
in
«-
S
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
a
S
t-
O
(O
a)
«*-
o «
*- E «_
W «> -s !8
* *
* «
* «
-------
t- *> I
1*1
s
0)
w
01
09
o
at
So
oi
I
01
0
fe
0)
u
II
II
II
II
II
II
all
II
Sll
II
< II
II
511
II
a n
u
u
u
ii
II
u
u
u
a
*
fc- N
0> II
.c «
s ::
* ii
UJ II
1- II
u- II
(M o IM co * to ! eo
ro o t\i i r»-
10 - !! *
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
*
t
? I:
B i ii
r- rj «-
*
*
UJ
I
u.
II
II
!!
!! c
II M
!!
n
n
||
N
n
n
| 3 £
01
u
s.
1
s
L.
0
U D
8 ?
1 ^
S o
8 £
Ul *D
a a
ourt
s
8
1
3
CD
ede
D) U Dl 01 O> * U-
_C L. C I. C W _^
DV»"DCrt'O£co a co a O.O
I
,z £
a. a
n
a*
u
- o 5|
^3 u
a * 2 «i
693-^
o com
o t- o> .* L.
01 to g
k- 4-> 0) 1. V
u. O "D -Q
-------
§
.2
^ OJD
5
^
a.
u
u
i
O
5
o
i.
I
L.
01
M
3
"S
O
g
i
<->
u.
I
4)
1-
1
1
*
1
>*
L.
1
o
<>t
u.
«
*
01
O
*
III
1=
41
E
a
*
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
t
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
!
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i S
O
o
CO
a
L.
Uu
§
i
i »
CA
O
1 U
1 M-
1 <4-
i °
1 X
i e
1 O
' SP
1
Kl (M O O K) O f- 1
«** «~ o o^ in o "«* i
eo ^ * oinrvo«~i
KlO* Kl *" P- CM « 1
0 - * «- 1
* !
i
i
4) 01 01 4) 4) 41 4) 1
tainMXcoMnwi
Sa a > ai 01 O) 0»
u v a. a a a u
._ ... a <- «- i.
H-H- t_ O O O4-I
OO^'^WWMO
_ a c
M O
0 M XI
U 1
2 J 3 * S>
o ^ o to c
S£3<<-*5-o;
L. O U .4141 «l.i
U. 4-* C>*~IO'
0> T3 IB « 2 (0 3 >
C t- O T) D C U -I m U
*- ova
4IOt i <0 E j: > _1 -li D
41 -p-i.m
*- w o C<>aOin>-4i
ui a> a> -a c C(n"-x«ifl»a.u-io
§o c o> "in4iC4JCLc3<0'<-
»O »t.4IC9inK4lfO
incr-
fO
3
CO
S
o
r
t
i
i
t
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
1
-------
|
Q-
I
0>
5
3
S
l_
0>
c
3
CO
*.
01
01
u-
SB
E
L.
4)
l
*
*
S
S.
5;
i
<-
5
V
O
a
UJ
t-
u-
*
*
t-
0)
-C
f\
«
111
£
i
z
1
i
i
i
i
i '
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
p
i
i
t
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
*
2
V
4J
Building, Sea
1 0)
1 O
i a
i
i ^
i
i n
i i-
1 O.
in
1
o>
10
a
41
5
C9
01
H-
o
to
°
0
in
CO
in
<
|
v>
1
§
L.
V
1
X
£
o
gional Laborat
2
V
U
o
in
CM
Kl
TO
§
S.
UJ
t
o
a
_g
ID
*
tn
tw
«^
^m
CM
4-*
ID
0>
<
111
01
£
O
eo
eo
£
3 2
§ «
-3 4-»
O (/>
£ «,
5: i
O t-
u
§ «
'i -5.
1- IK
§2
o
-* r\j
8 rt
o
S
o
CO
shington Place
S
Centra
in
S
4)
(A
8
<
iy
tu
o
CO
eo
S
*J
t Washington S
10
S
CM
CM
S
I
fcl
1
1
2
'E
CQ
5
Execut
o
3
01
1
s
C3
«l
-
O
w**
r\j
^^
(M
«
<
i
4-1
01
J=
4-«
3
«
eo
0) 0 1
i
i_ o i
i
i
i
i
i
i
|
i
4) 1
01 OI
£ £ !
O « 1
1
1
1
1
1
o o i
*- i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
CM 1
1
1
(
1
1
1
j
I
1
i
eo i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
!
i
< i
a i
i
O 1
I i
3 j
^* j
"o i
u i
Ul 1
K i
o < i
C 01 1
0> * £ 1
e 4-> 4-< i
4-> 4-" 3 1
I- 01 O 1
a t> oi i
Q. in l
0> X i
o - O -
a
CD
-*
1
01
4J
C
u
ID a
U L.
01 4->
U «
L. IU
3 I-
^
-------
r
.1
s-S
1
« s
co
«>
1
b "s
a
1
en
o:
s
u
%
a
u
o
o
LU
U
-------
g
!! 8
u
S
a.
ae
g
(J
* II
* II
01 II
8
'S
£
o
O
UJ
o
II
II
II
Ul II
i- n
u. U
$ s
N.
t
O) 01 O
ID U 4->
C- .- IS
O «- t-
4-> <4- Q
10 O J
u
Of
i
UJ
^-
u.
I
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
i!
!!
n
u
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
tl
CM «-
g
o S
p g
i!. is
l5 *i -
5 S ° is
£ = 5 fc 3
5 a 2 ? i
L. o 4-> a
Si. IB K CO
*j ._ r
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
o u in
n *
& u -*
a n r-
ii $
i: 2
n
E
o>
I
1
«
*j
a)
is ai
! I
w a
S -po
co So
u
IB
g
u
41
ili >. S B
i- «- a o>
- § ^ §£
* -C a 8 S
3 Q. O -
c S o 01 oi
41 C 4*
* * * «
* « * «
-------
r
Q.
Ill
U
I
z *.
fQ|
U.
(A
L. g
4} L*
CO 4.*
A) O
is
0 00
»-
UJ
1-
u.
t
0)
JC
Ul
1
u.
]
.
1
1
1
1
t
1
1
1
c° i
ill
*-» *- Z 1
M 3 1
OF AIR AND RADIATION (OA
B
UJ
U 1
C :
o !
i
l in o o
1 * O O
! 8 S « 2
i « « « 2
i *
i
!
i
i
i
i
i
i
! S 1 S S
i
! 5 £ S £
| o uj CO UJ
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
: t t
: g s 8 s
1 - t- O *- O
1 O XI O &
i ct a
i
i
i
i co * e M
1 -*«- IM
1 -T K)
II
i
1
1
1
1
1
1
1 co K «- IO
1 ~ IM
1 * «-
1
1
1
t
!
1
1
1 N. O» O
1 1*1 O
1 CM
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1 1
1 <
*
c
g
5
O)
t: x
o *
* R *
- .n *
x <- *
fe * *
S E 2
i- <
0 .U
* .a L.
* « v> u «
c a L. ui c x
- » oa 4> o o "O i;
f a > - « t
MfOICXMOV
3 i s 1 * 5 * 8:
c 1 £ . ^ B Jl!
a o w «-> 3
4^i-i-aico>o
2. .- .^ o 10 E o
-'>a.uii-o £ a. TI
i- S 4) u > in
3*jtc«>53-o:i
&oi o> 5 oii-mai
oz^ta"- M o«v
(a co ^ ** i
o* a o o x
a: uj z x ui
S £ J
o S *
m Q)
§tt 35
» 8 3
^
w cn a.
U O UJ
r . r
** U u
<8 - «>
C Ik- L.
O * 9
£ o a
a a
IM Ki S-
T- K «M
m
O CO O
in «-
(M in N-
*- N. *
IM
>
7
vi
Road and Interstate 40
Building, Research Trian
Chapel Hill street
mental Monitoring System
Box 15027
1 IS S 2
» I - i *
x ui
ii $
!!
n
u
ii
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
!! -2
II 4->
ii a
II 4J
it to
!! ^
n i-
II O
II 3
" 7
!! 1
II ED
II «
II III
ii a
II C
ii -a
i: ^ I
It -0
n «- «
II «- 10
II C
II <-
1 01
! I
1
1 M"
no. u
II T- 01
1! * &
1
_,
a
0
a '
tn
tn "O
a
o
S
«-*
II Cfl
II
1! »
i: s
n
n
n a
II V
1! 3
ii
ii
II Cl)
! 2
I «
I
ii ^
1 a>
! &
* <
! 5
i -
1 (0
II c
So
4->
I
U
t -C
1 4->
! °
i «
u
1 5
! 5
o
CA
designated by primary u
«
*
01
o>
a
4*
§
H»
0)
L.
m
a.
a
B)
c
S
%
!
4>
3
some special purpace sp
!
.£
L.
0
V
§
41
g
.2
orcement and Comp
f
UI
*4-
o
4t
U
^
"«-
t-
O
C
!
8
*
*
1
+*
Cfl
4-»
§
£
a
8
^
separate parking facili
*****
X
*0)
tJ
a
i»
'P
4)
4-*
n
-
01
L.
0)
U
u
**»
s
1
*4
2
§
^
RTP buildings occupied
*
«
*
*
X
U
4^
0
U
(D
0.
41
(0
"8
*^
CA
' 01
t.
V
>
_l
c
X
l»
o
«rf
a
1
a
_i
B
V
<0
>,
W
?
t,
o
4-»
|
M/
a>
**
o
t.
'>
c
UI
a
3
at
JE
«
1-
o
H-
Ul
01
4-*
U
CD
4-
«
*
#
«
«
to
-------
<
_l
<
X
UJ
11.
o
o -g
<0
-------
I
a
1
^^
V
I §
5" l
s o
u
£
ui
ce.
UJ
.
o
B
ft
1
fe
*J
a o
*
o eg
»-
LU
_£
«
i-
U
JC
v
O
Ul
1-
u-
S
t-
<
_i
1 0 1
1 O 1
i 3:
i i
i i
i i
i i
i
__ !
i i
i i
i
i
i
i i
V
i at i
i a i
1 V 1
i i
i
ss :
U 1
!
i i
i i
i i
i i
i
i
i i
i i
i
-------
?
!
s
s»
V o
!a
5"§
s «
£ ^
c «
= s
u S
I
u
s
s
£
O
2
1
CO
<_
41
in
1
4V
|
1
j
*~
01
UJ
H-
Other*
Ul
K-
n
n
i
ii
ii
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
|!
u
n
n
u
u
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
ii
u
u
n
u
n
N
n
n
1
i
t
n
n
n
n
»
n
n
it
n
n
u
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
§O* O O tn OH
O\ (NJ fO O* tv II
* CO l/\ IM OJ II
ru w- -* ii
t> 4> «) 01 « 41 !!
ii
ID to ID 10 09 ID II
jU _i _0j _«1 _W J> jj
> > W W CO CO II
O O U O C9 U II
jj
II
8o> o) oi oi o> ii
n .0 o o oj U
o a> o o o TJ 4J TJ *>
a> c o a> o
5 fe .S c. £ fe
ca * <<- "O i*- *O *-
flj Q QJ 1^ I|J >iw tjtj
4-> Q. 3 3
i_ o a CD
°~ QJ * |^J £^
w c o c LI c u
O O u- 5 u- O u-
X Q ,- Q O
« « -
" S '5 !!
0 « if 2
a no
z n i-
a
4-1
w
: s£
I
in 3 S
b J s
4-> a -p-
o 41
"5 "o w T
-------
O
ECTOR GEN
u
u.
u.
o
II
4) II 0.
ID 4» II r-
3 4> II
CT u. II
u> n
II
II
||
II
II
II
II
II
II
II V
« " a
t- E II 4)
t> «- n
01 0 1
u to
u o
n
n
n
ii
u
n
* 41
i -
1 -6
n
u
u
H
t- n *
4) II Kl
« ** n
S ° !!
o <* !!
UJ II
H- II
U- II
n
n -j
1 K*
*- U
U II
-C II
O II
II
II
n
n
n
ti
UJ II
i ii
u- II
II
I
II
II
n
n
»
n
n
u
J!
||
||
n
»
a
n
I
g> u
c n
"~ fl ii
- | || |
3 - |j o g
i :-i
n o 5 x
II *J E *
II o» 5} ^
II C U
II !c <9
II to Ut
!! S - e
l.s*'
it M * -«^ i
II 4* 15 '5 <
ij t 1 * .
|| 1 i fe g
BV w
X U.
O> in IM Kt on
- O CO K> * II
ro o- o K> (M u
si
II
II
u
II
ii
41 41 tl 41 41 II
« «- II
II
!!
II
II
II
U
O >» (M O 0 II
[I
i!
II
ii
II
>». eo e r - < !i
£ 3 ° -o * * !!
Q 2 . -o fe t « !!
5 * *j i_ > o w n
[ < | g * * ti !|
>MWgO>2 2 "
j. a! t! a o *^ S 3 § !!
I4J4J<5^4J4^4> II
UC£(AU(-(»>'PII
. - U .M ID w < C II
o en o -j w .c i
a.-iufi->-h-ii
« M M U 3 "- 1
CnwUCff^
- h-«>:i3U»-<-
> je m 41 f «-
3W'-SOOO«-»-
L. » 5. «- ||
ai 3 p «- ii
& t O> «* II
g
o
X
-------
II
18
1! 5
0. £
« £ 3 .C
(Q *S ** +J
5 -3 = '5
< O £ C,
B» < I- <
U C3)
(I II
W II
a n
- i
a
o
t
*
*
£
1
O
Qjj
111
1
U.
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
£
U O
O *
.* io
f- u
8 5
a
00 N
ii
£ t ii
o on
4-> W II
a ai i
i- t. i
o o i
A a i
!
S P |
i
i
i
ii
ii
;
U X 4->
£
_
? B. c
o TS » -
*sn
-------
§
1
1
w
a
% g
** S
S
U "3
5
ae
at
3
£
O
II 1
II 0
1
O 1
o
o
*> * ii o- n o
t. * II O II O
a * i
5- 9 !
tf> S>
U.
I
fe 1
to a!
3 1-
1
i » i
1 -*
n
n
i
i
i
i
i
1!
11
41 1
1
Q. 1
5* 1
I 1
£ I
8 !
II 1
!! !
i
L. 1
01 1
JC 1
4-> 1
0 O 1
*> 1
i
in i
- i
Kl I
1
in
,2 * !! s
LU 1
1- 1
U. 1
1
1
1
1
* 1
L. 1
0> 1
.C 1
4-> 1
0 1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
IT 1
»- 1
I*1. 1
I
1
1
1
1
1
1
in
v-
m
1 II
II II
1
i
ILI 1
1- 1
U. 1
1
1
1
1
1
1
j
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
o
ill
II
II
II
II
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
!
i
i
i
i
i
1 i
i
i
!
j
n
n
II It
j
II
II
1
C 1
O 1
1- II
<-> II
a ii
U II
O 1
_i n
n
n
ii
ii
ii
ii
ii
it
n
ii
ii
n
ii
n
n
n
ii
n
n
i
i
I
i
i
ii
. !'
U 1
1
13 1
tl
« II
: ii
3 II
> II
c !!
F '
a n
:x ii
n
C II
a i
M II
2 := !!
£ 8. !!
1- O 11
a i- i
3 M II
8" u ti
*
1
00
01
o>
a
S §
a x-
| 4.
CO
(/)
S. 1
3 1
01
o H
a x
I . I
-------
2
en
O
o
. 3
t. 4-1 11
4-i
z s
U) I.
ID t.
1 O) 10
V 3
>
M L."
3 H
. S
X u
l_
o c
4V 0
i a
1 (. w
o a
1 J5 4J
! 3! 5 £
! . , &
*. 1 S
1 0 4J C
1 W
i c en u
1 O
*> O) -C
en c a.
.£ T £
| S |
S 'c o
§! ;
! o> « r- t. o t.
i "O Z - eo "-
i a > >
1 «l C C
S
(M
(M
(M
X
*
X
0
a
i
5
o
>*
h"
00
S
a>
O
o!
%
C
o
a
4-1
U.
4-*
C
>
o
4-r
E
u
t_
u
I
f
u
Of
a
i_
UJ
I
CO
3
1
*
*
*
§
2
UJ
X
o
2
2
N.
3
m
o
(O
.1
(_
O
.?
2
c.
V
3
-J
C
4->
t_
a £ S
1
§
2
IU
X
o
1
(VI
fc
o
1
I
a
x I
? t
at
O 0)
u <-
I:
.c "
C 5
I
i
I
X
o
1
1A
5
O
O
ity, Cincinat
£ *
u. *
.uation
Street*
S*>
VI
* 0
(g o
01
s
1
2
Ul
X
o
1 1
1 c
£
nvironmental
6201 Cong<
*
41
i
2
UJ
X
o
ID
(D
OO
"-
"
X
o
o
§
a
4V
-------
u
oe
<
ui
CO
t>
L. 4-»
§ |
S3
L. S
0) I.
Box 500 '
Robert S. Kerr Environmental R
1
_,
^£
UJ
fe
1
<0
-o
in
in
o
0
01
ID
>
U
O
P.O. Box 1198
Environmental Research Laborat
ro
CM
in
§
_
<
CL
Ul
|
a
i
eo
5Q
i_
in
CM
g
4-*
1
z
Environmental Research Station
Marine Science Drive
1
41
*c
o
u.
s
1
Catauba Building, Research Tri
i
«.
a.
a
o-
4'
2'i
c.
».
c>
Ul
n
o
fj
g
in
"5
*
K
O
^
CM
R
01
<
CL
Ul
O
2
01
^M
in
o
(M
1 -
*
* I
1- CO
CO f
o. u
Building C, Research Triangle
Univ. of North Carolina at
«
*
n
*
CO
a.
Kron Building, Research Triang
1
o
at
CD
^
u
8
0
fn^
*
:
u
L.
a
a.
1
u
i
u
at
V
S
£
o
V
« 1
I
1
a i
l
i
l
l
i
l
I
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
l
l
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
eu i
1
g
£ i
4-> 1
3 1
O 1
in i
i
!
(
! K
1 NO
1
1
!
i
i
i
i
!
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i
.
PO
in
«»
o
CM
«-
in
S3
«-
a
**
O
5 .*
1
? u « -
> o
8 --5
** »
C 1
-------
8
E
o
01
9 U
j 5
^r o*
Cfl
t_ g
o c
10 41
3 J-
I
t_
41
- 5
a o
U
0 «
UJ
1-
u.
t
01
£
4-«
0
1
1
1
1
1
UJ 1
1- 1
" !
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
i
II
II
1!
II
II
II
II
II O
II 0
II O
II 0 «
II »- *
ii «- 5
n 5
n *
n
n
|j
n
n
n
u
1
II (1 pi
" « 8
!! Si
II -* O 1
II
!! 5 £ !
II O UJ 1
i
!! !
-
! t
1 01 O 1
1 O .Ml
t - 01
1 H- i. 1
1 w- O 1
1 Oil
1 ID 1
1 1
I
!
!
! 8 Rl !
! « !
i i
ii
1!
o <\i !!
3 ~ ii
II
II
II
!!
I
n
n
it
n
!u
n
n
u
it
j|
ii
ii
ii
n
n
ii
ii
!!
II
II
||
H
i
i **^*
1 O
1 «-
»^
1
1
!
f
1
1
1
1
I
i
(M
in
CO
CM
&
2
I
UJ
1-
(O
o
s
? I
I 2
-------
1'
1
£1
*-> t
fOI 1
01 1
ji 1
1
1
1
1
0
fc i
3 H
u
O II
i * 1!
5 t
i
i
i
.
I
. i
i
i
1) ~O l
« *
o c
" o
g £
I O 111
1
i
o
o
o
&
eu £
8 g
s ^
& «*-
CO O
s g
£ IS
fa O
a
4-»
O
(
V
ft
L.
«l
^
0
oB
UJ
U.
4
01
JC
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
1
1
II
11
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
It
II
II
!!
tl
u
<»-
**-
o
o
£
F>h
3
r**
t
o
u
£
1
fi
Kl
K
II
tl
II
II
a
ii
n
n
N
ii
H
n
n
n
n
ii
H
n
n
n
M
n
n
n
i!
II
u
£
o
g
N^
Of.
'5 £
von'
fe ~ !! 3
I !! £
O
4-*
8
ui _
» I. ' O>
u. g (0 C
n i- co
9 - o S
S S fe. I
1_ O) 10
I 'i § $
O T> n o>
-------
8;
t-
z
111
of
g
u
o
tl II
>- 4-> tl
I 8 !!
8 " !|
n
n
.u
it
n
n
n
n
n
n
<- £ !!
S fe !,'
O 1- tl
II
1
II
II
II
II
ii
1!
n
n
u
* !!
*. M
41 II
5 !!
i- n
n
n
u
II
II
1- II
01 II
JC II
» 4-» II
a o ii
* n
O o« II
*- II
UJ II
U. II
II
II
j. !!
* n
fe !!
f ii
4-* II
0 II
II
II
II
jj
U
U
II
II
Ul II
£ ii
i!
n
M
u
!j
n
i
1 U
<-
0>
«!
^
II C
II -
II TJ
II '
c ii !§
* Tl A*
=5 1 !! .,
<
i :
II
II
II
M
jj
jl
Jj
II
II
II
II
TJ n
V II
C II
X II
O II
II
< II
OL II
Ul II
u
II
II
II
II
II
X II
<> II
<> II
in H
1 8
.0 n
a 11
u
n
n
O H
!*? !!
n
n
u
n
H
H
jl
H
Kl II
CO II
«- II
II
jj
II
II
tl
II
~fe 1
Os II
*~ !!
H
n
n
ii
H
u
n
n
n
u
n
H
jj
H
II
II
II
II
It
II
ll
II
II
jj
u
!!
If
II
4t
oe n
Ul II
3 II
W II
u
°* ii
s
a
UJ i
J-* U
g
'I? -
" 1
Ml
-------
i
Ul
in
3
V
tm
1
"
CO
m. .L
_
a
**»
o
0)
TJ
CD
-
$
u.
01
*
«
^_
L.
«i
JZ
*»
o
«a
UJ
*
u
01
o
Ill
t-
u.
z
1
II
II
1
II
!!
n
u
n
u
n
n
n
u
u
u
N
u
n
n
n
1!
n
u
u
u
i)
n
ii
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
u
n
n
u
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
u
II
11
II
II
11
11
II
II
II
II
LI
II
II
II
|!
!!
n
»
||
n
n
n
ii
1
u
u
n
n
n
n
ti
n
u
1!
It
II
II
I
II
II
II
II
II
II
^_
in
u
tfl
a
«?
>
to
a
s
>
3
1
c_
<0
8
is
s
CO
is
*"S
IA
imj.
,
-
1
X
S
o
o
ro
'01
It
II
II
!|
I
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
11
U
II
II
II
II
U
II
II
II
II
tl
II
II
II
II
II
II
11
It
II
::
u
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
11
II
II
II
II
II
II
11
II
II
II
II
II
II
n
n
n
u
n
n
n
n
n
u
n
n
u
11
u
ii
n
u
n
n
n
n
n
n
ti
n
u
!!
II
n
n
||
j|
n
!!
jj
jj
n
H
|;
ii
jj
11
-------
0)
L. V
i «
s^
UJ 01
3 1-
1
1
1
j
j
1
1
* i
i :
g ',
x i
»- i
i
i
ii
41 tl
f II
-i *J II
a o ii
o M !!
*~ UJ II
LU M
!r !!
*^ n
n
ii
n
Jn
. i|
^ n
«-> <- 1
0 «JM Q 1
i . - -Q
a o «B 2 |
0) 1
1
fin O i
r M i
i
i
i
J
i
o in o i
9 -* ffl !;
-° ~ !!
u
ii
i!
ii
I
ii
i!
j
j
g
i
II
II
If
II
II
::
n
!!
N
ii
N
ii is
It
ii *
|
i!
n
i
i
!
!
|
i
!
|
i
i
in
ib
«
S
0
3
u.
5
2
Ul
UJ
oc
&
8 2
c »
a t.
IS*
I ol
U 'D i.
O S Q.
ll *
-------
b E
« 4)
3 t-
$ !!
8. i!
X II
O »8
£
«
t
0>
f
0
1
1
1
!
8
*0
Z
o
is
rvi
"3 N
I ::
01 II
D> II
O II
L. II
O
M
119
1
I
X U "- M
o .e o> p.
-------
inin«-coi>»
ineoi-MOp'lroKi'-
CMrocvi»-'-»-«- ru
PJ
o o o h- »n
NO ^ O
M K> <3
** * p»-
i- ~» «M
II st^*f1O»..>».--»OQin
u coroo»»i'ncMininr>.(\iocM-**-r«-<OeO«~>OCO'43CM<^*O*"«-T-« Kl
« o
0 ^
UJ
Other**
<
1
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
I
11
II
3K»O'srin^.'O « CM
»-NtmOf\io in rs. <>i ru *-
>*O -^ «" f*- * -* co o in in
in T- eo «- r^ in -* «- ^O
ij «^
!!
u
u
u
u
in r\i II
M) O II
eo co ii
ii
ii
n
ii
n
!!
n
n
n
n
n
GRAM OFFICES |
1
S !
0. -|
i I
* !
1 i
U 1
UJ 1
ee l
l
l
i
i
L.
o
I
(A
c
I
01
« JI
iggggggggggs
o)o>cnD)Oicno)cno}H'-
u 4) 4) tt 41 &) 4> 41 4) V fl> **»
rcttococttoeaeiKttctfaeo
4-1
M
Of
i
1
I
g
a
u
*
O
8
«t-
o
adiation
1
<
o
01
u
H-
o
in
a
*#»
H-
<
«J
E
ti
4J
X
111
o
S
»»-
o
o
u
~9
C.
»
o
8
o
e Monitoring |
i
1
1
(0
1
o
»*.
c
UJ
o
(I
u
SV
o
a
L.
i-^
a*
f
o
01
o
0
CD
01
1
U
1
<0
___
o
0.
o
01
u
H-
o
g
1
I
a
1
a.
X
u
S.
o
8
5
S
a
1
f
a
o
oe
o
0
u
i*-
o
o
ae
1
O)
Ul
!
3
I
O
g
H-
0
L.
Of
*J
J
o
------- |