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United States Government Accountability Office:

GAO:

Testimony:

Before the Subcommittee on the Legislative Branch, Committee on 
Appropriations, U.S. Senate:

Capitol Visitor Center:

Update on Status of Project's Schedule and Cost as of April 27, 2006:

Statement of Terrell Dorn, 
Director: 
Bernard L. Ungar: 
Director: 
Physical Infrastructure Issues:

GAO-06-665T:

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee:

We are pleased to be here today to assist the Subcommittee in 
monitoring progress on the Capitol Visitor Center (CVC) project. Our 
remarks will focus on the Architect of the Capitol's progress in 
achieving selected project milestones and in managing the project's 
schedule since the Subcommittee's March 15, 2006, hearing on the 
project.[Footnote 1] As part of this discussion, we will address a 
number of key challenges and risks that continue to face the project, 
as well as actions AOC has taken or plans to take to address these 
risks. In addition, we will discuss the status of the project's costs 
and funding.

Our remarks today are based on our review of schedules and financial 
reports for the CVC project and related records maintained by AOC and 
its construction management contractor, Gilbane Building Company; our 
observations on the progress of work at the CVC construction site; and 
our discussions with the CVC team (AOC and its major CVC contractors), 
AOC's Chief Fire Marshal, and representatives from the U.S. Capitol 
Police. We also reviewed AOC's construction management contractor's 
periodic schedule assessments and daily reports on the progress of 
interior wall and floor stonework.

In summary:

Since the Subcommittee's March 15 CVC hearing, the CVC team has 
continued to move the project's construction forward, and AOC is still 
proposing the same opening dates--April 2007 for the base CVC project 
and May 2007 for the House and Senate expansion spaces--but we continue 
to believe, as we said at the March hearing, that the proposed opening 
dates do not allow enough time to complete several critical activities 
and to address problems, challenges, risks, and uncertainties. Since 
the March 15 hearing, the installation of critical interior wall and 
floor stone has continued, together with other interior and exterior 
construction work, and the sequence 2 contractor has further developed 
plans to prevent trade stacking[Footnote 2] during finish work. 
However, the pace of interior wall and floor stone installation 
remained below the targeted pace; the dates for completing the 
construction of the overall base project and expansion spaces were 
extended; and several activities fell behind schedule--not enough to 
affect the overall completion dates yet, but increasing the potential 
for future delays. In addition, the sequence 2 contractor met only 1 of 
the 13 milestones being tracked for this hearing, and this contractor's 
monthly billings indicate that construction work is not likely to be 
completed on schedule as AOC anticipated. The CVC's fire protection 
system has not yet been approved; critical building systems still have 
to be commissioned and tested; and although the project's overall 
design is essentially complete, certain design or work scope elements 
are still incomplete or are being clarified or refined. If the CVC team 
is successful in addressing these issues, we believe that the base CVC 
project can still possibly be opened to the public with a temporary cap 
on visitor occupancy in May 2007 and that the expansion spaces can 
likely be opened for occupancy beginning in mid-August to early 
September 2007. AOC may be able to reduce some of the time scheduled 
for the expansion spaces if it implements a phased opening plan and is 
able to perform acceptance testing of the CVC and the expansion spaces 
concurrently rather than sequentially--possibilities AOC is continuing 
to explore. However, the delays that have occurred since the 
Subcommittee's last CVC hearing compound the concern we previously 
expressed that AOC will be challenged to meet even the later dates we 
are projecting because of the problems, challenges, risks, and 
uncertainties facing the project. Accordingly, we plan to reassess the 
project's schedule again this summer.

As we reported at the Subcommittee's March 15 CVC hearing, we estimate 
that the total cost to complete the entire CVC project is about $556 
million without an allowance for risks and uncertainties and $584 
million with such an allowance. To date, about $530 million has been 
provided for CVC construction. We continue to estimate that AOC will 
need about $25.6 million more in CVC construction funds to complete the 
entire CVC project. This estimate does not allow for risks and 
uncertainties and takes into account funding that AOC plans to use from 
existing appropriations. In addition, as we indicated during the March 
15 hearing, AOC preliminarily expects to need about $950,000 in fiscal 
year 2007 AOC general administration appropriations that Congress has 
not yet provided to pay for contractual support needed to complete 
acceptance testing of the facility's fire protection system in time to 
meet the project's schedule. AOC plans to determine if it can reduce 
the amount needed for this contractual support; we will keep the 
Subcommittee apprised of this situation.

AOC Has Moved Construction Forward, but Delays Continue and Risks and 
Uncertainties Remain:

AOC and it contractors have made progress in a number of areas since 
the Subcommittee's last CVC hearing, particularly in installing wall 
stone in the orientation and security lobby and in the south atrium. 
However, some milestones were pushed back in March. For example, 
according to AOC's March 2006 schedule, the base CVC project will have 
a temporary certificate of occupancy on February 21, 2007, 6 workdays 
later than indicated in the February 2006 schedule, and the House and 
Senate expansion spaces will be substantially complete on December 18, 
2006, 1 workday later than indicated in the February 2006 schedule. AOC 
is still proposing an April 2007 opening date for the base project and 
a May 2007 occupancy date for the expansion spaces--dates that it 
believes will accommodate possible delays and allow start-up time for 
operations. AOC expects all construction work in the CVC, East Front, 
and expansion spaces to be completed by the April opening date for the 
base project, but the CVC's occupancy at any one time will be 
temporarily limited to 3,500, compared with about 4,200, the normal 
anticipated occupancy level.[Footnote 3] Schedule slippages that have 
occurred since the Subcommittee's March 15 CVC hearing, coupled with 
the challenges, risks, and uncertainties that continue to face the 
project, have heightened our concerns about AOC's ability to open the 
CVC to the public in April 2007. Consequently, we plan to reassess the 
project's schedule again this summer.

Our Analysis Indicates Later Opening Dates Than AOC Is Proposing:

We continue to believe, as we testified in March, that the CVC is not 
likely to be ready for opening with a temporary certificate of 
occupancy before May 2007, about a month later than AOC is proposing. 
Our projected opening date is somewhat later than AOC's because certain 
critical work, such as interior stonework for the base project and East 
Front, has not generally been proceeding as quickly as planned and CVC 
team managers and members believe that certain other work, such as 
finish work, will take more time than is scheduled to complete. Our 
projection also assumes that AOC will be able to address the challenges 
it faces and takes into account the time that AOC believes is necessary 
to prepare for operations after construction work is completed. 
However, schedule slippages in March raise concerns about AOC's ability 
to overcome these challenges. Similarly, we continue to believe that 
the House and Senate expansion spaces are more likely to be ready in 
mid-August or early September 2007 than in April or May 2007, as AOC is 
proposing. We consider the later time frames for the expansion spaces 
more likely for three reasons. First, AOC has scheduled the acceptance 
testing of the expansion spaces after the acceptance testing of the 
base project and, according to our analysis, the base project's testing 
will take longer than scheduled. Second, AOC's Chief Fire Marshal 
believes the acceptance testing of the expansion spaces will take 
longer than scheduled. Third, several activities important to the on- 
time completion of expansion-space work slipped in March; and at this 
time, the sequence 2 subcontractor responsible for this work believes 
that additional slippages in some of these activities are likely. 
However, AOC has begun to address the problems affecting the progress 
of the expansion spaces and plans to reassess this situation as the 
construction work proceeds. The expansion spaces could be ready sooner 
than late summer 2007 if AOC succeeds in addressing the problems and 
starts acceptance testing sooner or opens the expansion spaces in 
phases--possibilities that AOC is continuing to explore.

Construction Work Is Progressing:

According to AOC's construction management contractor, work on the 
project has advanced, in terms of both the dollar value of the work in 
place and individual project elements. In dollar terms, the overall CVC 
project was about 79 percent complete and the sequence 2 work was about 
67 percent complete as of March 31-up from about 77 percent and 63 
percent, respectively, as of February 28. Additionally, wall stone 
installation progressed substantially in the orientation and security 
lobby and in the south atrium and continued in other areas, such as the 
great hall and the East Front's basement level. AOC's construction 
management contractor reported additional progress in the CVC's 
interior, the utility and House connector tunnels, the House and Senate 
expansion spaces, and the building's exterior, such as on the plaza's 
east side in preparation for tree planting, which occurred north and 
south of the auditorium in April. In fact, AOC's construction 
management contractor reported that the CVC's electrical work was ahead 
of schedule.

Indicators Raise Questions about Proposed Opening Dates:

Despite the progress in these areas, problems and delays occurred in 
other areas, and several indicators of construction progress that we 
have been tracking for the Subcommittee continue to indicate that 
construction work is likely to be completed later than AOC currently 
anticipates. An update on these indicators follows.

Sequence 2 contractor continues to miss milestones and completion dates 
are extended. Starting with the Subcommittee's June 2005 CVC hearing, 
at the Subcommittee's request, we and AOC have been selecting and 
tracking sequence 2 milestones to help the Subcommittee monitor 
construction progress. These milestones include activities that are 
either on the project's critical path or that we and AOC believe are 
critical to the project's timely completion. As figure 1 shows, the 
sequence 2 contractor has generally missed these milestones. For 
today's hearing, 13 of these milestones were due to be completed, 
according to the project's January 2006 schedule. One was completed 
ahead of schedule; 2 were completed late; and none of the remaining 10 
had been completed as of April 24. (See app. I.)

Figure 1: Sequence 2 Contractor's Progress in Meeting Selected 
Milestones as of CVC Hearing Dates:

[See PDF for image] 

Source: Sequence 2 contractor, AOC and its construction management 
contractor, and GAO.

[End of figure]

According to AOC's construction management contractor, the base 
project's overall completion date fell 6 workdays behind in March, from 
February 13 to February 21, 2007. The February 13 date was set in the 
project's January 2006 schedule. This 6-workday delay is the net result 
of delays in activities on multiple activity paths. In addition, 
slippages occurred on 15 of 19 critical and near-critical paths that 
AOC's construction management contractor identified as important to 
meeting the base project's overall completion date.[Footnote 4] These 
delays occurred in, but were not limited to, work on the East Front, 
the upper level of the orientation and security lobby, the auditorium, 
the utility tunnel, the assembly room, and the orientation theaters, 
and they ranged from 1 to more than 80 workdays. According to the CVC 
team, these project delays occurred for a variety of reasons, such as 
design changes, problematic sequence 1 work, late submissions or 
approvals of shop drawings, and changes in the sequence of work 
activities by the sequence 2 contractor. Even more important than the 
individual delays themselves, however, is their likely impact on the 
CVC team's ability to complete construction work on schedule. So many 
activities have now fallen behind schedule that even relatively short 
additional delays could push back the CVC's overall completion date. 
According to the construction management contractor, there are nine 
critical and near-critical activity paths in the project's March 
schedule that have so little slack time that an additional delay of 1 
to 30 workdays could delay the base project's overall completion date. 
There were six such paths in the project's February schedule.

Work on the House and Senate expansion spaces fell 1 workday behind 
schedule in March, AOC's construction management contractor 
reported.[Footnote 5] Additionally, and of even greater concern to us, 
are delays in a number of near-critical paths. Some of these paths 
slipped as much as 29 workdays in March. Although most of the time that 
was lost in March did not affect the overall completion date for the 
expansion spaces, further delays could do so. Among the activities that 
were delayed in March were plumbing installation on the House service 
level; duct work installation in space intended for use by the U.S. 
Capitol Police; testing and balancing of the heating, ventilation, and 
air conditioning systems on the Senate upper level; and completion of 
the fire alarm system in the House lower level. According to the CVC 
team, these activities were delayed because of problems associated with 
sequence 1 or other sequence 2 work, delays in getting approved shop 
drawings, and delays in completing necessary predecessor work or in 
getting design decisions.

In early April 2006, we told AOC we were concerned about the increasing 
number of delays in expansion space activities and the potential impact 
of these delays on the completion of the expansion space work. As 
further cause for concern, we noted that the sequence 2 subcontractor 
doing the expansion space work was expecting additional delays in some 
of these activities and that, in our view, additional design or scope 
changes were possible. Although AOC is not planning to open the 
expansion spaces until May 2007, timely completion of the expansion 
space work is important because certain expansion space work must be 
completed before the CVC can be opened to the public. AOC agreed that 
continued delays in the expansion space work are of concern and 
recognized that risks and uncertainties associated with the work could 
cause the work to fall farther behind. AOC has begun to work with the 
rest of the CVC team to identify and address problems that have arisen 
and risks that threaten the work's on-time completion.

Value of completed work indicates completion later than scheduled. 
Another indicator of construction progress that we and AOC's 
construction management contractor have been tracking is the value of 
the completed construction work billed to the government each month. 
Both we and the construction management contractor believe that the 
sequence 2 contractor's monthly billings, including the bill for March 
2006, have generally not been sufficient to meet AOC's currently 
scheduled completion date. While this indicator has some limitations 
(for example, billings lag behind construction and the contract's total 
value does not include the value of modifications that are beyond 
modification 85), it is generally regarded in the construction industry 
as a useful measure of how likely a project is to be completed on time. 
Figure 2 compares the sequence 2 contractor's billings since May 2003 
with the project's scheduled completion date and indicates that the 
sequence 2 contractor is not likely to finish construction work by 
December 2006, as AOC expects, unless the value of completed work 
increases significantly. We believe that a significant increase will be 
difficult, given the limited number of areas that will be ready for 
finish work at any given time.

Figure 2: Total Billings by the Sequence 2 Contractor for the Entire 
CVC Project Compared with the Billings Needed to Finish Construction 
Work on Schedule:

[See PDF for image] 

Source: AOC's construction management contractor. 

Notes:

1. The early and late lines on this figure reflect the cumulative 
billings that would be required to complete the project through 
contract modification 85 ($222.8 million total contact value) by the 
early and late finish dates shown in the sequence 2 contractor's 
schedule.

2. The actual line reflects the sequence 2 contractor's actual monthly 
billings.

3. Although bills are typically submitted for payment after work is 
completed, it is often likely that construction work will be completed 
on schedule when the actual billing line falls between the early and 
late lines in the figure. With respect to the CVC, the actual billing 
line has been trending below, and in March 2006 went below, the late 
finish line. Even with the lag in billings, this trend indicates that 
the amount of work being completed each month is not sufficient to 
finish the project on schedule.

[End of figure]

Interior stone installation is progressing, but taking longer than 
expected. Overall, about 64 percent of the CVC's interior wall stone 
has been installed, according to AOC's construction management 
contractor, and the sequence 2 contractor installed 5,079 pieces of 
interior wall stone during the last 5 weeks, meeting about 94 percent 
of its 5,384-piece production target. By contrast, during the same 
period, the sequence 2 contractor installed about 3,090 square feet of 
floor stone, or about one-third of the 9,300 square feet specified in a 
preliminary floor stone installation plan that the contractor provided 
to AOC shortly after the February 15 hearing. In addition, 7 of the 13 
schedule milestones that AOC and we have been tracking for the 
Subcommittee for today's hearing are related to interior wall stone 
installation, and the sequence 2 contractor met 1 of these 7 
milestones. According to the CVC team, the sequence 2 contractor has 
missed its stone installation targets for a variety of reasons, 
including the need to correct problematic sequence 1 work or properly 
prepare certain spaces for the installation of wall or floor stone, a 
change in wall stone design, late delivery of floor stone, or delays in 
some spaces in finishing certain work, such as ceiling work, that 
usually precedes floor stone installation. As we have discussed in the 
Subcommittee's previous CVC hearings, delays in wall stone installation 
can lead to additional delays in completing follow-on work, such as 
floor stone installation and finish work. Although the CVC team has 
identified unforeseen conditions and problematic sequence 1 work as 
risks that could affect the pace of wall stone installation, the team's 
efforts to address the risks have not fully prevented these types of 
problems from recurring or adversely affecting the project's schedule. 
Figures 3 and 4 show the sequence 2 contractor's progress in installing 
interior wall and floor stone since January 23 and February 13, 2006, 
respectively.

Figure 3: Progress of CVC Interior Wall Stone Installation Compared 
with Targets Set by the Sequence 2 Contractor:

[See PDF for image] 

Source: AOC's construction management contractor.

[End of figure]

Figure 4: Progress of CVC Interior Floor Stone Installation Compared 
with Preliminary Targets Set by the Sequence 2 Contractor:

[See PDF for image] 

Source: AOC's construction management contractor.

[End of figure]

Project's Schedule Remains Vulnerable to Problems, Challenges, Risks, 
and Uncertainties, despite Actions AOC Has Taken and Plans to Take:

As we indicated during the Subcommittee's February 15 and March 15 CVC 
hearings, we continue to believe that AOC will be challenged to meet 
even the later opening dates we have identified, given the problems, 
challenges, risks, and uncertainties facing the project. A brief update 
on these and AOC's plans for addressing them follows:

* Trade stacking could delay completion. As we discussed during the 
Subcommittee's previous CVC hearings, trade stacking could hold up 
finish work, such as drywall or ceiling installation, electrical and 
plumbing work, plastering, or floor stone installation. This work could 
be stacked because of delays in wall stone installation. According to 
AOC's construction management contractor, the pace of wall stone 
installation during March has not been sufficient to eliminate the risk 
of trade stacking and delays in finish work. Such a situation could 
also increase the risk of accidents and injuries. Hence, it remains 
important, as we said at the previous CVC hearings, for the CVC team to 
closely monitor construction to identify potential trade stacking and 
promptly take steps to address it. The CVC team has also identified 
trade stacking as a high risk, and since the Subcommittee's March 15 
CVC hearing, the sequence 2 contractor has continued to develop area- 
by-area plans that will show when each subcontractor will be working in 
each area. The sequence 2 contractor has finished these plans for most 
of the work areas and expects to have plans for the remaining areas 
completed by the end of this week. According to the sequence 2 
contractor, it has been meeting with its key subcontractors to reach 
agreement on the plans and intends to continue meeting regularly with 
them to review and update the plans. The sequence 2 contractor pointed 
out that these plans add more detail to the project's schedule and will 
serve as a tool for addressing the trade-stacking issue. Although we 
and AOC agree that these area-by-area plans are important and should be 
helpful, we are still concerned about the potential for trade stacking 
because of the delays that have already occurred and the delays that 
could occur if shop drawings for the fire protection system are not 
approved in time to avoid slippages in follow-on work or if changes are 
required as a result of the Fire Marshal Division's review of the 
drawings.

* Complex building systems remain a significant risk. The CVC will 
house complex building systems, including systems for heating, air 
conditioning, and ventilation; fire protection; and security. These 
systems not only have to perform well individually, but their operation 
also has to be integrated. If the CVC team encounters any significant 
problems with their functioning, either individually or together, 
during commissioning or acceptance testing, the project could be 
seriously delayed. During the Subcommittee's March 15 CVC hearing, we 
noted that the sequence 2 contractor planned to submit the shop 
drawings for the CVC's fire protection system for review by March 17. 
However, the contractor has not submitted the drawings for the base 
project as of April 24, in part because more time was needed to 
incorporate changes, AOC's construction management contractor said. AOC 
expects the drawings to be submitted by the end of this week. Delays 
could arise if the proposed system does not meet the project's design 
specifications or the fire protection code's requirements.[Footnote 6] 
AOC's Chief Fire Marshal believes that it will take at least 4 weeks to 
review these drawings. In addition, the Chief Fire Marshal notes that 
delays could occur if the CVC team does not adequately pretest the 
system and correct any problems found during the pretesting. Since the 
Subcommittee's last CVC hearing, AOC's commissioning contractor 
submitted its plan for testing the performance of the CVC's smoke 
control system, which is a critical component of the CVC's fire 
protection system and must work properly before the CVC can be opened 
to the public. This plan has not yet been approved. In addition, as we 
have previously noted, the Chief Fire Marshal's timely completion of 
the fire protection system's acceptance testing depends on his ability 
to obtain sufficient funding for a contractor to help perform the 
tests. Furthermore, difficulties the CVC team has had resolving scope, 
design, and cost issues associated with the CVC's technical security 
system could adversely affect the schedule for acquiring and installing 
cabling and equipment for this system, including door hardware. The CVC 
team and representatives from the U.S. Capitol Police have been working 
to resolve these problems. Nevertheless, according to AOC's 
construction management contractor, certain changes to the scope of the 
security work are likely to set the schedule back to some extent.

* Building design and work scope continue to evolve. The CVC has 
undergone a number of design and work scope changes. Since the project 
began, AOC's architectural contractor has issued over 180 design 
changes or clarifications, and as of April 20, 2006, reported having 
another 14 in process. In addition, since the project began, AOC has 
executed more than 80 sequence 2 contract modifications valued at over 
$23 million for work that was not anticipated.[Footnote 7] Some of 
these changes, such as changes in the exhibit gallery and in the East 
Front, have resulted in delays. In addition, shop drawings for a number 
of project elements, such as the facility's fire protection system, 
millwork in the food service area and assembly rooms, and certain 
portions of the exhibit gallery, have not yet been fully approved and 
are subject to change, and additional design or scope changes are 
likely given the project's experience to date. Project design and scope 
changes are typically reflected in the development of potential change 
orders (PCO), many of which result in contract modifications. Figure 5 
shows the PCOs submitted for consideration for sequences 1 and 2 since 
September 2003. Although PCOs are not always approved, they are often 
regarded as a reasonably good indicator of likely future design or 
scope changes that can affect a project's cost and schedule. Even more 
important, the adverse impact of scope and design changes on a 
project's schedule is likely to increase as the project moves toward 
completion. For example, certain changes to the fire protection system 
currently being discussed are likely, if made, to adversely affect the 
project's schedule, according to AOC.

Figure 5: Cumulative Number of Potential Change Orders Submitted for 
CVC Sequences 1 and 2 between September 2003 and April 2006:

[See PDF for image] 

Source: AOC's construction management contractor.

[End of figure]

As the figure indicates, new PCOs for sequence 1 were submitted until 
shortly before, and even for several months after, November 2004, when 
AOC determined that the sequence 1 contract work was substantially 
complete. Similarly, PCOs for sequence 2 are still being submitted, and 
we have seen no indication that their submission is likely to stop 
soon. While not all PCOs are approved, many are, and it appears likely 
to us that some of the design or scope changes indicated in PCOs could 
lead to contract modifications that will affect the project's schedule. 
AOC agrees that it is important to minimize the impact of proposed 
design and scope changes.

* Opening the CVC and expansion spaces at different times is likely to 
result in a temporary cap on CVC occupancy and increase costs. As we 
reported during the Subcommittee's February 15 and March 15 CVC 
hearings, AOC's current plan to open the CVC in April 2007 before the 
expansion spaces are scheduled for completion is likely to result in a 
temporary cap on CVC visitor occupancy and a need to construct 
temporary emergency exits for fire and life safety protection.[Footnote 
8] AOC is proposing this sequential approach because it believes that 
conducting acceptance testing for the fire protection system for the 
CVC and the expansion spaces concurrently would delay opening the CVC 
to the public. AOC's proposed April 2007 opening date for the CVC 
depends on the timely completion of work not only on the base project 
but also on the expansion spaces, since certain expansion space work 
must be completed before the CVC's opening. Inasmuch as work on both 
the base project and the expansion spaces was delayed in March, we 
believe that it will be especially important to monitor the progress of 
construction to determine what additional work (and funding) may be 
needed to meet AOC's planned date for opening the CVC, including what 
temporary work may be required in the expansion spaces for the CVC to 
open before the expansion space work is complete. According to AOC, it 
plans to have its construction management contractor monitor this 
situation.

* Risks from insufficient stone deliveries remain, but may be 
diminishing. According to the sequence 2 contractor, it has, since the 
Subcommittee's last CVC hearing, received 12 of the 12.5 truckloads of 
interior wall stone it was expecting from the stone fabricator and 
expects to receive the remaining wall stone needed for the base project 
by mid-June 2006. AOC's construction management contractor reported 
that as of last week, almost all--about 98 percent--of the wall stone 
needed for the core CVC itself was on site (either installed or 
awaiting installation); about 44 percent of the wall stone needed for 
the atriums and about 30 percent of the wall stone needed for the East 
Front were on site; and none of the wall stone for the House connector, 
Library of Congress, and Cannon tunnels had been delivered. According 
to AOC and its construction management contractor, although the supply 
of interior wall stone was insufficient in late 2005 and early 2006, it 
is adequate for the CVC at this time, given the amount of space 
available for wall stone installation and the quantity of stone on 
hand--over 6,800 pieces. Furthermore, they said that they do not expect 
the wall stone supply for the base project to cause further delays in 
the CVC's opening, provided that the fabricator sustains the pace of 
deliveries, particularly for the East Front, whose completion is 
critical to the CVC's opening. Also, although none of the wall stone 
for the House and Senate expansion spaces was on site yet, the 
subcontractor responsible for this work is not anticipating delivery 
problems at this time. On the other hand, AOC's construction management 
contractor reported that no floor stone was installed during the week 
of April 10 because, as a result of a late delivery from the supplier, 
the installers ran out of floor stone for the exhibit gallery. The 
sequence 2 contractor said this late delivery was unusual for floor 
stone and no further problems with floor stone supply were expected.

Finally, as we have said in previous discussions with AOC, its 
construction management contractor, and the Subcommittee, it will be 
important for AOC to have adequate analysis and documentation of the 
reasons and responsibilities for delays.[Footnote 9] On April 11, 2006, 
AOC executed a contract modification authorizing its construction 
management contractor to have one of its managers who has not been 
involved in the CVC project assess the adequacy of this type of 
information. AOC expects this assessment to be completed soon.

Estimated Project Cost and Funding:

As we testified during the Subcommittee's March 15 CVC hearing, we 
estimate that the total cost to complete the entire CVC project will be 
about $556 million without an allowance for risks and uncertainties and 
could be as much as about $584 million with such an allowance. To date, 
about $530 million has been provided for CVC construction. This amount 
includes about $3.6 million that was made available for either CVC 
construction or operations and has been approved for CVC construction 
by the House and Senate Committees on Appropriations.[Footnote 10] To 
obtain the additional funding that it expected to need to complete the 
project's construction, AOC, in December 2005, requested $20.6 million 
as part of its budget request for fiscal year 2007. This request was 
based, in part, on discussions with us and took into account our 
November 16, 2005, estimate of the cost to complete the project's 
construction without an allowance for risks and uncertainties and 
funding from existing appropriations. Our subsequent work--completed in 
preparation for the Subcommittee's February 15 and March 15 CVC 
hearings--indicated that AOC would need about $5 million more, or about 
$25.6 million in additional CVC construction funds, to complete 
construction without an allowance for risks and uncertainties. AOC 
plans to request the additional $5 million as a supplement to its 
fiscal year 2007 budget for CVC construction. This would bring its 
total request for fiscal year 2007 CVC construction funds to $25.6 
million. In addition, AOC has indicated that it plans to use about 
$950,000 of the fiscal year 2007 general administration appropriations 
it has requested for contractual support for its Fire Marshal Division.

As we stated in our March 15 testimony, AOC believes that it may be 
able to reduce the amount of funds it will need in fiscal year 2007 for 
contractual support in testing the CVC's fire protection system and 
plans to explore ways to do so. AOC expects that its Fire Marshal 
Division should receive the shop drawings for the CVC's fire protection 
system by the first week in May, and the Chief Fire Marshal believes 
that his office will need at least 4 weeks to complete its review. It 
then plans to determine how much contractual support it will need to 
test the system and to explore cost savings possibilities. We plan to 
monitor and report on these costs to the Subcommittee as soon as AOC 
has a firmer estimate. Also, at this time, it appears that sufficient 
contingency funding may be available within the current CVC budget to 
cover the cost increases associated with the security system issues we 
previously discussed. We will keep the Subcommittee apprised of this 
situation.

Mr. Chairman, this completes our prepared statement. We would be 
pleased to answer any questions that you or Members of the Subcommittee 
may have.

Contacts and Acknowledgments:

For further information about this testimony, please contact Bernard 
Ungar at (202) 512-4232 or Terrell Dorn at (202) 512-6923. Other key 
contributors to this testimony include Shirley Abel, John Craig, Maria 
Edelstein, Elizabeth Eisenstadt, Brett Fallavollita, Jeanette Franzel, 
Jackie Hamilton, Bradley James, Joshua Ormond, Scott Riback, and Regina 
Santucci.

[End of section]

Appendix I: Capitol Visitor Center Critical Construction Milestones, 
March 16-April 27, 2006:

Table 1: 

Activity: Frame Plaster Ceiling; 
Location: Great Hall; 
Scheduled completion: 3/17/06; 
Actual completion: 4/14/06.

Activity: Wall Stone Area 3; 
Location: East Front Basement; 
Scheduled completion: 3/20/06; 
Actual completion: [Empty].

Activity: Wall Stone Area 5; 
Location: Auditorium; 
Scheduled completion: 3/22/06; 
Actual completion: 4/18/06.

Activity: Wall Stone Area 2; 
Location: Orientation Lobby Upper Level; 
Scheduled completion: 3/27/06; 
Actual completion: [Empty].

Activity: Wall Stone Area 3; 
Location: Orientation Lobby Upper Level; 
Scheduled completion: 3/31/06;
Actual completion: 3/09/06.

Activity: Lath Plaster Ceiling; 
Location: Great Hall; 
Scheduled completion: 3/31/06; 
Actual completion: [Empty].

Activity: Wall Stone Area 1; 
Location: East Front Ground; 
Scheduled completion: 4/03/06; 
Actual completion: [Empty].

Activity: Grid for Wood Ceiling; 
Location: Orientation Theater; 
Scheduled completion: 4/03/06; 
Actual completion: [Empty].

Activity: Plaster Ceilings; 
Location: Great Hall; 
Scheduled completion: 4/06/06; 
Actual completion: [Empty].

Activity: Wall Stone Area 2; 
Location: East Front Ground; 
Scheduled completion: 4/17/06; 
Actual completion: [Empty].

Activity: Install Bronze Doors; 
Location: Food Service; 
Scheduled completion: 4/17/06; 
Actual completion: [Empty].

Activity: Install Wood Ceiling Panels; 
Location: Orientation Theater; 
Scheduled completion: 4/17/06; 
Actual completion: [Empty].

Activity: Wall Stone Area 4; 
Location: Orientation Lobby; 
Scheduled completion: 4/21/06; 
Actual completion: [Empty]. 

Source: AOC's January 2006 CVC sequence 2 construction schedule for the 
scheduled early completion dates and AOC and its construction 
management contractor for the actual completion dates as of April 24, 
2006.

[End of table] 

[End of Section]

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FOOTNOTES

[1] GAO, Capitol Visitor Center: Status of Project's Schedule and Cost 
as of March 15, 2006, GA0-06-528T (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 15, 2006).

[2] Trade stacking can occur when workers from different trades, such 
as stone masons, electricians, plumbers, or plasterers, have to work in 
the same area at the same time to meet a schedule, sometimes making it 
difficult to ensure sufficient space and resources for concurrent work.

[3] This temporary limit will be necessary because the "horizontal 
exits," or passages, through the expansion spaces, which the life 
safety code requires for exiting the base CVC project, will not be 
available until later. These horizontal exits cannot be used until the 
fire alarm system in the expansion spaces has been fully tested and 
accepted--work that is not slated to be completed until after the base 
CVC is scheduled to open. Some additional work will likely be required 
to provide temporary emergency exit routes from the CVC, but the CVC 
team does not believe that this work or its costs should be 
substantial. 

[4] Construction projects typically have one critical path, which is 
the sequence of activities having the longest duration through the 
schedule. There is no slack time associated with these activities, 
meaning that a delay in a critical path activity will delay the entire 
project unless a way is found to reduce the time required for other 
activities along the critical path. Some projects have multiple 
critical paths simultaneously; the CVC essentially has two concurrent 
critical paths--(1) East Front mechanical and (2) East Front fire 
acceptance testing--and many near critical activity paths which have 
little slack time. Generally, the more critical and near-critical 
activities a project has, the greater is the risk of late completion 
because there are more opportunities for slight delays that can 
adversely affect the project's completion.

[5] According to the project's February and March schedules, the 
overall completion of the House and Senate expansion spaces remained 
the same--May 2, 2007. The contract completion date for this work is 
March 12, 2007. 

[6] According to the sequence 2 subcontractor that is fitting out the 
House and Senate expansion spaces, the delays in getting approved shop 
drawings for the fire protection system have already postponed ceiling 
close ins in the expansion spaces, and the subcontractor's CVC project 
director believes that further such delays pose the single greatest 
risk to the completion schedule for the expansion spaces at this time.

[7] These data exclude sequence 2 contract modifications for work that 
was planned but not included in the sequence 2 base contract. Examples 
include the fit-out of the House and Senate shell spaces, the 
construction of the utility tunnel, and the purchase and installation 
of food service equipment.

[8] According to AOC, the CVC's occupancy at any one time would be 
temporarily limited to 3,500, compared with about 4,200, the normal 
anticipated occupancy level, until acceptance testing of the fire 
protection system for the expansion spaces has been completed.

[9] See for example: GAO, Capitol Visitor Center: Effective Schedule 
Management and Updated Cost Information Are Important, GAO-05-811T 
(Washington, D.C.: June 14, 2005).

[10] Public Law 108-447, enacted on December 8, 2004, provided that up 
to $10.6 million could be transferred from AOC's Capitol Building 
appropriation account for the use of the CVC project. The use of the 
amount transferred is subject to the approval of the House and Senate 
Committees on Appropriations. In June 2005, AOC received approval to 
use about $2.8 million (including about $1.6 million for CVC 
construction) of this $10.6 million, leaving a balance of about $7.7 
million that could be used in the future after a rescission amounting 
to $84,800. AOC recently received approval to use about an additional 
$2 million of these funds for CVC construction, including, for example, 
the fabrication and installation of wayfinding signage and the fit-out 
of the gift shops, and about $2.3 million for CVC operations. Thus, 
about $3.4 million of the $10.6 million remains available for approval 
for use for CVC construction or operations.