Last update: 04/15/2008
Capitol Master Plan
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- Master Plan for the
Capitol of the State of Washington - full version
(7.75 MB in
PDF format) - Master plan - in downloadable sections
- Master plan reference documents
The 2006 Master Plan for the Capitol of the State of Washington is a complete update of the previous master plan, published in 1991. The new master plan addresses contemporary issues of state facility construction and location that affect facilities planning and decision-making in the capital community of Olympia, Lacey, Tumwater and Thurston County.
Changes and improvements
The new master plan is different in five major ways from previous plans:
- It has expanded its geographic scope to cover all of Thurston County.
- It has expanded to cover leased facilities and state-owned facilities. Previous plans concentrated on state-owned buildings on the Capitol Campus.
- It adds planning principles and policies, location criteria, and site characteristics to help guide facility decisions.
- Its focus is on principles and values, rather than geography.
- It has been formatted to be updated easily and frequently.
The plan is divided into three sections:
- The function and purpose of state government facilities
- The context of state facilities
- The durability of state facilities
Contact
- Tom Evans, Master Plan Lead, tevans@ga.wa.gov, (360) 902-0972
- Send comments with our online Feedback form
Capitol Master Plan - Sections
Introductory information (1.51 MB
)
- Title page
- Credits
- Table of contents
- Vision
- Strategy and scope
- Organization and format
- Future updates methodology
- Chronology of past planning
- Definition of Capitol Campus
1: The Function and Purpose of State Government Facilities
(1.30 MB
)
- Principle #1 Public Use and Access
- Policy 1.1 Public Use of State Buildings
- Policy 1.2 Public Use of Capitol Grounds
- Policy 1.3 Educational Opportunities
- Policy 1.4 Accessibility for All
- Principle #2 Delivery of Public Services
- Policy 2.1 Location of State Government Functions
- Policy 2.2 Long Range Planning by State Agencies
- Policy 2.3 Co-Location and Consolidation of State Facilities
2: The Context of State Government Facilities
(2.83 MB
)
- State Capital Communities and Urban Growth Areas Map
- Principle #3 Community Vitality
- Policy 3.1 Preferred Development and Leasing Areas
- Policy 3.2 Transportation Demand Management
- Policy 3.3 Environmental Stewardship
- The Greater Capital Community
- How Communities are Impacted by State Government
- Capitol Parks
- Introduction
- Heritage Park
- Marathon Park
- Deschutes Parkway
- Capitol Lake
- Sylvester Park
- Centennial Park
- Capitol Lake Interpretive Center
- Principle #4 Stewardship of Historic Properties
- Policy 4.1 Preservation of State Capitol Buildings, Grounds, and Collections
- Policy 4.2 Adoption of National Standards
- Policy 4.3 Preservation of Off-Campus Cultural Resources
- Principle #5 Design
- Policy 5.1 Capitol Campus Open Space
- Policy 5.2 Design at the Capitol Campus
- Policy 5.3 Design at Off-Campus Locations
- Policy 5.4 Universal Access
- Policy 5.5 Commemoratives and Artwork on State Capitol Grounds
3: The Durability of State Government Facilities
(351 KB
)
- Principle #6 Technical Performance
- Policy 6.1 High Performance Buildings
- Policy 6.2 Critical Infrastructure Systems
- Policy 6.3 Integration with Local Infrastructure
- Principle #7 Financial Performance
- Policy 7.1 Financing Strategies
- Policy 7.2 Leased versus Owned Analysis
- Policy 7.3 Portfolio Management
4: Future Development
Opportunities (1.81 MB
)
- West and East Campuses
- Tumwater Satellite Campus
- Lacey Satellite Campus
- Other Off-Campus Opportunity Sites
- Acknowledgements
Master plan reference documents
Thurston County lease and space planning reports
General Administration prepared six reports in 2000 for the Thurston County Lease and Space Planning Project. This 18-month project was directed in the 99-01 capital budget. A final report to the Legislature (Report 7) was completed in December 2000.
- Report 1

September 1999. Described leased and owned state facilities in Thurston County, reviewed current facility management practices, and updated facility planning by the Department of Health and the state's transportation agencies. - Report 2 and
Appendices 2

Issued in November 1999 to help the Governor and Legislature consider agency requests for new space. - Report 3 and
Appendices 3

December 1999. Provided information about space needs for the departments of Health, Transportation, Licensing, State Patrol, Social and Health Services and summarized pros and cons of leasing vs. owning. - Report 4 and
Appendices 4

May 2000. Gathered lease and space planning information from the media, local and state officials, developers and state agencies. - Report 5
and Appendices 5

October 2000. Updated planning and analysis from June through September 2000 and summarizes planning and policy direction given GA by the State Capitol Committee. - Report 6

A high-level summary of 15 months of information gathering, analysis and work with state agencies, local government and the state’s landlords. The report asks this question: How and where should state government be housed in Thurston County over the next 10 years? - Report 7

The final report, as directed by the 1999 State Legislature.
Office building studies
Two office building studies were completed early in this planning project. They are available to review at:





