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W. Averell Harriman State Office Building Campus

42°40′46.32″N 73°48′34.2″W / 42.6795333°N 73.809500°W / 42.6795333; -73.809500

The Department of Taxation and Finance (Buildings 8 and 8A)

The W. Averell Harriman State Office Building Campus is an office park in western Albany, New York, United States that houses sixteen New York State Government office buildings. The land totals roughly 330 acres (130 ha) and over 3 million square feet (280,000 m2) of office space,[1] and about 7,000 state employees work there.[2] The campus was built during the 1950s and 1960s[1] in a suburban, car-oriented style bordered by an outer ring road that cuts the campus off from the surrounding neighborhoods. The campus is flanked by Washington Avenue to the north, Western Avenue to the south, University at Albany to the west, and New York State Route 85 to the east. With its own steam generation power plant for cooling and heating (Building 17) the campus is mostly self-sufficient.[1][3]

History edit

The campus was planned in the 1950s by Governor W. Averell Harriman to offer more parking and easier access for state employees.[1] Prior to this the land was part of the Albany Pine Bush with the Albany Municipal Golf Course to the west where the University at Albany is today.[1][4] The first building (Building 1, Department of Civil Service) was built in 1956, and 2, 9, and 17 were completed by the early 1960s, but most of the buildings were built in the mid-late 1960s under Governor Nelson Rockefeller.[1][5] In 1964 the Division Headquarters Building (Building 22) of the New York State Police was built in the campus, marking the first time that the administrative and headquarters support services were consolidated in the same building. Three years later the State Police Academy (Building 24) was built next door.[6] The State Police Forensics Center (Building 30), was built in 1994.[1] In 1987 less than 2 acres (0.81 ha) on Brevator Street was given at no charge to the city of Albany for use of a new fire station, Engine 10. This increased coverage for the western part of the city, including the Harriman Campus and University at Albany.[7]

Starting with Governor Hugh Carey in the 1970s, policy has been to relocate workers from the Harriman Campus and other suburban settings to the various downtowns of the Capital District; Albany, Schenectady and Troy. The plan continued under governors Mario Cuomo and George Pataki; Pataki signed into law in 1998 the $235 million Albany Plan that further sped up the process and included privatizing the campus after moving the majority of state workers to other locations. From 1995 to 2005 over 13,364 state workers were relocated around the Capital District, including moving the 1,400 New York State Department of Transportation workers from the Harriman Campus to a renovated 50 Wolf Road in Colonie (the former New York State Department of Environmental Conservation headquarters).[2]

The Harriman Research and Technology Development Corporation (HRTDC) was established in 2004 as a subsidiary of the Empire State Development Corporation and has been tasked with the redevelopment of the campus.[8][9] The plan was originally envisioned in 2003 as a bold move to completely eliminate the ring road, demolish the existing buildings, and construct a hotel, commercial, residential, and high tech office space all integrated with the surrounding neighborhoods.[10] The Harriman Campus once included land north of Washington Avenue and south of Interstate 90. In 2006 Columbia Development purchased 12.6 acres (5.1 ha) of surface-parking north of Washington Ave for $4.2 million to add to its growing Patroon Creek Corporate Center. Buildings 1 and 1a were slated to be demolished in 2006 as part of that Albany Plan, funded with the proceeds from the parking lot sale to Columbia Development.[11] As of 2015, the buildings have been demolished.

That far-reaching plan, however, was scrapped by Governor Eliot Spitzer in 2007. Two very different proposals were put forth, one by the Howard Group that kept to the original idea of integration, retail, and residential space and demolition of existing structures, the other by Columbia Development. Columbia Development's proposal, which would keep the state office buildings and privatize the land putting it back on the tax rolls piecemeal as tenants were lined up, was the one chose by the HRTDC. Residential development would take a smaller role as would retail. The ring road would also stay unless land requirements would require moving it, but not until tenants were definitely lined up for space. The campus would remain apart and segregated from the surrounding neighborhoods. Columbia Development will begin with just a five to 15-acre (61,000 m2) parcel in the northwest corner of the campus and has a one-year window starting in 2010 to market it for development.[10] The neighboring University at Albany has petitioned for a transfer of 3.3 acres (1.3 ha) from the Harriman Campus to the university in order to build a new dormitory, and the HRTDC agreed to the transfer. This has taken place; it was under the purview of the Office of General Services (OGS), the state agency that acts as landlord for state-owned property, since the former OGS Commissioner John Egan was also the chairman of the HRTDC this was not likely to be a problem.[12]

Plans to relocate state workers and privatize the campus have seen a further reversal as time has passed. Recently 200 employees of the Office of Real Property Services have been moved from downtown Albany to the campus, as well as plans for a new 3-story building to house a laboratory for 50 workers of the Department of Agriculture. Preliminary plans also call for a $100 million data center for the Department of Technology.[13]

Agriculture and Markets, the new Building # 6, is complete and occupied. Further, in 2015, the Office of General Services' Business Services Center moved into a renovated Building 5.

In July 2016, New York State released a Request for Proposals for a 27-acre part of the Harriman Campus for sale to private investment.[14]

Map edit

http://www.albanylocal.com/w-averell-harriman-state-office-campus-map/

Buildings edit

Building Tenant[15] Floors[15] Constructed[15] Proposed future use'[15]
1/1A Formerly Department of Civil Service[9] 3 1958/1970 Demolished[11]
2 Department of Corrections and Community Supervision 3 1958 Demolish (New York State OGS announced on 11/22/2016 that demolition would start on 11/28/2016)
3 Campus Children's Center - previously Cafeteria & Credit Union Remodeled 2015-16 1 1964 Opened September 2016
4 Former Campus Children's Center Remodel to begin late 2016; Reopened Summer 2021 with NYS Department of Corrections and Community Supervision as tenant 3 1964 Office/R&D
5 Re-opened on or about 7/7/2015 after renovations
Office of General Services (OGS) Business Services Center (BSC)
Office of the State Comptroller (OSC)
E-licensing
Office of Information Technology Services (ITS)
Formerly Department of Transportation
7 1963 As is
6 Department of Agriculture and Markets Lab 3 2013 As is
7/7A Department of Agriculture and Markets (7)
Harriman Business Center Incubator (7A)
Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services (7A)
Office of Counter Terrorism (7A)
Office of Cyber Security (7A)
Office of Interoperable and Emergency Communications (7A)
3-9 1963/1972 Office/R&D
8/8A Department of Taxation and Finance 8/1 1964 Demolish
9 Department of Taxation and Finance 4 1961 Office
12 Department of Labor 5 1963 Demolish
17 Steam generation power plant (Campus Power Plant) 1 1960 As is
18 Office of General Services, CRU/Graphics
Campus management and security
1 1965 As is
21 Department of Education Records Center 1 1967 As is
22 New York State Office of Emergency Management
New York State Police
4 1964 As is
24 New York State Police Academy 1967[6] As is
30 New York State Police Forensics Center 1994[1] As is

Harriman Business Center Incubator edit

The Harriman Business Center is a business incubator in Building 7A at the campus. The University at Albany's Small Business Development Center has an office on-site to provide consulting, training, and other services.[16] The University also has its College of Computing and Information at the incubator. Other tenants are the New School of Radio and Television, Petrolab (a division of Ametek), Applied Visions, Inc., and Breonics (a bio-medical research firm)0.[17]

State Emergency Management Office edit

Below the Harriman Campus is a two-story underground bunker designed to withstand a nuclear attack, adjacent to the State Police Headquarters. This bunker was built over 40 years ago to assure continuation of the government of the state of New York in case of an emergency during the Cold War. As originally built it was to accommodate 400 people for up to two weeks, during the late 1990s it received a $1 million renovation to house the State Emergency Management Office (SEMO) in response to concerns over the Y2K bug.[18] It has been brought to full-operation multiple times, including the following: once on January 1, 2000 to monitor the Y2K bug, then again after the September 11th attacks,[19] and again during both responses to Hurricane Irene & Tropical Storm Lee (2011) and Superstorm Sandy. It is a fully functional emergency management office, housing the state coordination center, or Emergency Operations Center (EOC), and manages disaster response for the State of New York, as warranted.[20]

Infrastructure edit

Of the roughly 330 acres (1.3 km2) that comprise the Harriman Campus about 155 of them (45%) is open-space; the rest is buildings, roads, sidewalks, and parking lots. Two ring roads surround the main portion of the campus. The outer road is a three lane one-way traveling counterclockwise and has thirteen access points to NY 85, I-90, Brevator Street, Western Avenue, and Washington Avenue. The inner road is a three lane one-way traveling clockwise and allows access to campus buildings and parking lots. The roads are connected by several one-way Texas U-turns. Peak traffic counts on all six lanes of the ring road is approximately 4,000 vehicles per hour. The highest volume of traffic entering the campus ring road is from the Crosstown Arterial (NY 85).[15]

The Capital District Transportation Authority (CDTA) runs public transit lines through the campus connecting it to the surrounding region.

The Building 17 Campus Power Plant produces steam that is piped to all the buildings through a duct-system. It is used for heating during the winter and is used to generate chilled water for cooling from April to October. Electricity is delivered to the campus by National Grid.[15]

The New York State Police Troop G serves the needs of the campus. The city of Albany's West Station supplements the state police presence as needed. Fire protection is provided by the city of Albany's Engine 10 fire station on Brevator Street.[15]

Activities edit

The New York State Office of General Services’ Special Events Office puts on craft shows, a farmer's market, and noon-time food vendors in a central courtyard at the campus.[21] A memorial garden in memory of the September 11th attacks is located near Buildings 8 and 9. Unofficial activities that take place (and are not actually permitted) are jogging, bird-watching, dog-walking, and on the ring road- road races.[15]

Sick Building Syndrome edit

In 1991, several employees of Building 8 became ill after the pesticide chlorpyrifos was misused in the building.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h McGuire, Mark (1997-09-28). . Times Union (Albany). Hearst Newspapers. p. A1. Archived from the original on 2011-04-30. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  2. ^ a b Benjamin, Elizabeth (2005-11-05). . Times Union (Albany). Hearst Newspapers. p. A1. Archived from the original on 2011-07-23. Retrieved 2010-07-04.
  3. ^ Chazen Environmental Services, Inc. (2008-05-28). "Phase 1 Environmental Site Assessment Parcel E-2: Harriman State Office Campus" (PDF). New York State Office of General Services. Retrieved 2010-07-04.
  4. ^ The Louis Berger Group, Inc. (September 2008). (PDF). The Chazen Companies. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-03-08. Retrieved 2010-07-06.
  5. ^ Chazen Environmental Services, Inc. (2008-05-28). "Phase I Environmental Site Assessment Parcel A: Harriman State Office Campus" (PDF). New York State Office of General Services. Retrieved 2010-07-04.
  6. ^ a b "NYSP History: 1960s". State of New York. Retrieved 2010-07-03.
  7. ^ "State May Give Albany Land for New Fire Station". Times Union (Albany). Hearst Newspapers. 1987-07-10. p. 4A. Retrieved 2010-07-05.
  8. ^ "Harriman Research and Technology Development Corporation (HRTDC)". State of New York/Empire State Development Corporation. Retrieved 2010-07-03.
  9. ^ a b "History and Description of the Harriman Campus" (PDF). State of New York. Retrieved 2010-07-05.
  10. ^ a b Churchill, Chris (2010-01-29). "State Plan's New Look". Times Union (Albany). Hearst Newspapers. p. C1. Retrieved 2010-07-03.
  11. ^ a b Larry Rulison (2006-08-18). "State Ready to Raze Harriman Buildings". Times Union (Albany). Hearst Newspapers. p. E1. Retrieved 2010-07-04.
  12. ^ Carleo-Evangelist, Jordan (2010-01-14). "UAlbany Dorm Options Limited". Times Union (Albany). Hearst Newspapers. p. D5. Retrieved 2010-07-04.
  13. ^ Churchill, Chris (2010-08-19). "Late Budget Pushes Back Harriman Project". Times Union (Albany). Hearst Corporation. Retrieved 2010-08-20.
  14. ^ "State ready to part with a chunk of Harriman". 13 July 2016.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h C.T. Male Associates, P.C. (2007-08-27). "Draft Generic Environmental Impact Statement Redevelopment Strategy for the Harriman State Office Campus" (PDF). New York State Office of General Services. Retrieved 2010-07-05.
  16. ^ "Harriman Business Center Building 7A" (PDF). Harriman Research and Technology Park. Retrieved 2010-07-04.
  17. ^ "HRTDC Business Center". Empire State Development Corporation. Retrieved 2010-07-05.
  18. ^ Lyons, Brendan (2000-01-01). "State Sees Only Minor Glitch". Times Union (Albany). Hearst Newspapers. p. A5. Retrieved 2010-07-06.
  19. ^ Odato, James and Jay Jochnowitz (2001-09-12). "Catastrophe Tests State". Times Union (Albany). Hearst Newspapers. p. B1. Retrieved 2010-07-06.
  20. ^ Professional knowledge
  21. ^ "Vendor/Participant Directions to the Empire State Plaza & Harriman State Office Campus for OGS Special Events' shows & festivals" (PDF). State of New York. Retrieved 2010-07-04.

External links edit

  • Emporis[dead link] entry for Harriman Research and Technology Park, including separate entries for Buildings 5, 7A, and 8.


averell, harriman, state, office, building, campus, 6795333, 809500, 6795333, 809500, department, taxation, finance, buildings, office, park, western, albany, york, united, states, that, houses, sixteen, york, state, government, office, buildings, land, totals. 42 40 46 32 N 73 48 34 2 W 42 6795333 N 73 809500 W 42 6795333 73 809500 The Department of Taxation and Finance Buildings 8 and 8A The W Averell Harriman State Office Building Campus is an office park in western Albany New York United States that houses sixteen New York State Government office buildings The land totals roughly 330 acres 130 ha and over 3 million square feet 280 000 m2 of office space 1 and about 7 000 state employees work there 2 The campus was built during the 1950s and 1960s 1 in a suburban car oriented style bordered by an outer ring road that cuts the campus off from the surrounding neighborhoods The campus is flanked by Washington Avenue to the north Western Avenue to the south University at Albany to the west and New York State Route 85 to the east With its own steam generation power plant for cooling and heating Building 17 the campus is mostly self sufficient 1 3 Contents 1 History 2 Map 3 Buildings 3 1 Harriman Business Center Incubator 3 2 State Emergency Management Office 4 Infrastructure 5 Activities 6 Sick Building Syndrome 7 References 8 External linksHistory editThe campus was planned in the 1950s by Governor W Averell Harriman to offer more parking and easier access for state employees 1 Prior to this the land was part of the Albany Pine Bush with the Albany Municipal Golf Course to the west where the University at Albany is today 1 4 The first building Building 1 Department of Civil Service was built in 1956 and 2 9 and 17 were completed by the early 1960s but most of the buildings were built in the mid late 1960s under Governor Nelson Rockefeller 1 5 In 1964 the Division Headquarters Building Building 22 of the New York State Police was built in the campus marking the first time that the administrative and headquarters support services were consolidated in the same building Three years later the State Police Academy Building 24 was built next door 6 The State Police Forensics Center Building 30 was built in 1994 1 In 1987 less than 2 acres 0 81 ha on Brevator Street was given at no charge to the city of Albany for use of a new fire station Engine 10 This increased coverage for the western part of the city including the Harriman Campus and University at Albany 7 Starting with Governor Hugh Carey in the 1970s policy has been to relocate workers from the Harriman Campus and other suburban settings to the various downtowns of the Capital District Albany Schenectady and Troy The plan continued under governors Mario Cuomo and George Pataki Pataki signed into law in 1998 the 235 million Albany Plan that further sped up the process and included privatizing the campus after moving the majority of state workers to other locations From 1995 to 2005 over 13 364 state workers were relocated around the Capital District including moving the 1 400 New York State Department of Transportation workers from the Harriman Campus to a renovated 50 Wolf Road in Colonie the former New York State Department of Environmental Conservation headquarters 2 The Harriman Research and Technology Development Corporation HRTDC was established in 2004 as a subsidiary of the Empire State Development Corporation and has been tasked with the redevelopment of the campus 8 9 The plan was originally envisioned in 2003 as a bold move to completely eliminate the ring road demolish the existing buildings and construct a hotel commercial residential and high tech office space all integrated with the surrounding neighborhoods 10 The Harriman Campus once included land north of Washington Avenue and south of Interstate 90 In 2006 Columbia Development purchased 12 6 acres 5 1 ha of surface parking north of Washington Ave for 4 2 million to add to its growing Patroon Creek Corporate Center Buildings 1 and 1a were slated to be demolished in 2006 as part of that Albany Plan funded with the proceeds from the parking lot sale to Columbia Development 11 As of 2015 the buildings have been demolished That far reaching plan however was scrapped by Governor Eliot Spitzer in 2007 Two very different proposals were put forth one by the Howard Group that kept to the original idea of integration retail and residential space and demolition of existing structures the other by Columbia Development Columbia Development s proposal which would keep the state office buildings and privatize the land putting it back on the tax rolls piecemeal as tenants were lined up was the one chose by the HRTDC Residential development would take a smaller role as would retail The ring road would also stay unless land requirements would require moving it but not until tenants were definitely lined up for space The campus would remain apart and segregated from the surrounding neighborhoods Columbia Development will begin with just a five to 15 acre 61 000 m2 parcel in the northwest corner of the campus and has a one year window starting in 2010 to market it for development 10 The neighboring University at Albany has petitioned for a transfer of 3 3 acres 1 3 ha from the Harriman Campus to the university in order to build a new dormitory and the HRTDC agreed to the transfer This has taken place it was under the purview of the Office of General Services OGS the state agency that acts as landlord for state owned property since the former OGS Commissioner John Egan was also the chairman of the HRTDC this was not likely to be a problem 12 Plans to relocate state workers and privatize the campus have seen a further reversal as time has passed Recently 200 employees of the Office of Real Property Services have been moved from downtown Albany to the campus as well as plans for a new 3 story building to house a laboratory for 50 workers of the Department of Agriculture Preliminary plans also call for a 100 million data center for the Department of Technology 13 Agriculture and Markets the new Building 6 is complete and occupied Further in 2015 the Office of General Services Business Services Center moved into a renovated Building 5 In July 2016 New York State released a Request for Proposals for a 27 acre part of the Harriman Campus for sale to private investment 14 Map edithttp www albanylocal com w averell harriman state office campus map Buildings editBuilding Tenant 15 Floors 15 Constructed 15 Proposed future use 15 1 1A Formerly Department of Civil Service 9 3 1958 1970 Demolished 11 2 Department of Corrections and Community Supervision 3 1958 Demolish New York State OGS announced on 11 22 2016 that demolition would start on 11 28 2016 3 Campus Children s Center previously Cafeteria amp Credit Union Remodeled 2015 16 1 1964 Opened September 20164 Former Campus Children s Center Remodel to begin late 2016 Reopened Summer 2021 with NYS Department of Corrections and Community Supervision as tenant 3 1964 Office R amp D5 Re opened on or about 7 7 2015 after renovations Office of General Services OGS Business Services Center BSC Office of the State Comptroller OSC E licensingOffice of Information Technology Services ITS Formerly Department of Transportation 7 1963 As is6 Department of Agriculture and Markets Lab 3 2013 As is7 7A Department of Agriculture and Markets 7 Harriman Business Center Incubator 7A Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services 7A Office of Counter Terrorism 7A Office of Cyber Security 7A Office of Interoperable and Emergency Communications 7A 3 9 1963 1972 Office R amp D8 8A Department of Taxation and Finance 8 1 1964 Demolish9 Department of Taxation and Finance 4 1961 Office12 Department of Labor 5 1963 Demolish17 Steam generation power plant Campus Power Plant 1 1960 As is18 Office of General Services CRU GraphicsCampus management and security 1 1965 As is21 Department of Education Records Center 1 1967 As is22 New York State Office of Emergency Management New York State Police 4 1964 As is24 New York State Police Academy 1967 6 As is30 New York State Police Forensics Center 1994 1 As isHarriman Business Center Incubator edit The Harriman Business Center is a business incubator in Building 7A at the campus The University at Albany s Small Business Development Center has an office on site to provide consulting training and other services 16 The University also has its College of Computing and Information at the incubator Other tenants are the New School of Radio and Television Petrolab a division of Ametek Applied Visions Inc and Breonics a bio medical research firm 0 17 State Emergency Management Office edit Below the Harriman Campus is a two story underground bunker designed to withstand a nuclear attack adjacent to the State Police Headquarters This bunker was built over 40 years ago to assure continuation of the government of the state of New York in case of an emergency during the Cold War As originally built it was to accommodate 400 people for up to two weeks during the late 1990s it received a 1 million renovation to house the State Emergency Management Office SEMO in response to concerns over the Y2K bug 18 It has been brought to full operation multiple times including the following once on January 1 2000 to monitor the Y2K bug then again after the September 11th attacks 19 and again during both responses to Hurricane Irene amp Tropical Storm Lee 2011 and Superstorm Sandy It is a fully functional emergency management office housing the state coordination center or Emergency Operations Center EOC and manages disaster response for the State of New York as warranted 20 Infrastructure editOf the roughly 330 acres 1 3 km2 that comprise the Harriman Campus about 155 of them 45 is open space the rest is buildings roads sidewalks and parking lots Two ring roads surround the main portion of the campus The outer road is a three lane one way traveling counterclockwise and has thirteen access points to NY 85 I 90 Brevator Street Western Avenue and Washington Avenue The inner road is a three lane one way traveling clockwise and allows access to campus buildings and parking lots The roads are connected by several one way Texas U turns Peak traffic counts on all six lanes of the ring road is approximately 4 000 vehicles per hour The highest volume of traffic entering the campus ring road is from the Crosstown Arterial NY 85 15 The Capital District Transportation Authority CDTA runs public transit lines through the campus connecting it to the surrounding region The Building 17 Campus Power Plant produces steam that is piped to all the buildings through a duct system It is used for heating during the winter and is used to generate chilled water for cooling from April to October Electricity is delivered to the campus by National Grid 15 The New York State Police Troop G serves the needs of the campus The city of Albany s West Station supplements the state police presence as needed Fire protection is provided by the city of Albany s Engine 10 fire station on Brevator Street 15 Activities editThe New York State Office of General Services Special Events Office puts on craft shows a farmer s market and noon time food vendors in a central courtyard at the campus 21 A memorial garden in memory of the September 11th attacks is located near Buildings 8 and 9 Unofficial activities that take place and are not actually permitted are jogging bird watching dog walking and on the ring road road races 15 Sick Building Syndrome editIn 1991 several employees of Building 8 became ill after the pesticide chlorpyrifos was misused in the building citation needed References edit nbsp New York state portal a b c d e f g h McGuire Mark 1997 09 28 Dirt Not Ivy Covers This Campus Times Union Albany Hearst Newspapers p A1 Archived from the original on 2011 04 30 Retrieved 2010 05 22 a b Benjamin Elizabeth 2005 11 05 Questioning Grand Plan s Legacy Times Union Albany Hearst Newspapers p A1 Archived from the original on 2011 07 23 Retrieved 2010 07 04 Chazen Environmental Services Inc 2008 05 28 Phase 1 Environmental Site Assessment Parcel E 2 Harriman State Office Campus PDF New York State Office of General Services Retrieved 2010 07 04 The Louis Berger Group Inc September 2008 Phase I Archaeological Survey Harriman State Office Campus PDF The Chazen Companies Archived from the original PDF on 2012 03 08 Retrieved 2010 07 06 Chazen Environmental Services Inc 2008 05 28 Phase I Environmental Site Assessment Parcel A Harriman State Office Campus PDF New York State Office of General Services Retrieved 2010 07 04 a b NYSP History 1960s State of New York Retrieved 2010 07 03 State May Give Albany Land for New Fire Station Times Union Albany Hearst Newspapers 1987 07 10 p 4A Retrieved 2010 07 05 Harriman Research and Technology Development Corporation HRTDC State of New York Empire State Development Corporation Retrieved 2010 07 03 a b History and Description of the Harriman Campus PDF State of New York Retrieved 2010 07 05 a b Churchill Chris 2010 01 29 State Plan s New Look Times Union Albany Hearst Newspapers p C1 Retrieved 2010 07 03 a b Larry Rulison 2006 08 18 State Ready to Raze Harriman Buildings Times Union Albany Hearst Newspapers p E1 Retrieved 2010 07 04 Carleo Evangelist Jordan 2010 01 14 UAlbany Dorm Options Limited Times Union Albany Hearst Newspapers p D5 Retrieved 2010 07 04 Churchill Chris 2010 08 19 Late Budget Pushes Back Harriman Project Times Union Albany Hearst Corporation Retrieved 2010 08 20 State ready to part with a chunk of Harriman 13 July 2016 a b c d e f g h C T Male Associates P C 2007 08 27 Draft Generic Environmental Impact Statement Redevelopment Strategy for the Harriman State Office Campus PDF New York State Office of General Services Retrieved 2010 07 05 Harriman Business Center Building 7A PDF Harriman Research and Technology Park Retrieved 2010 07 04 HRTDC Business Center Empire State Development Corporation Retrieved 2010 07 05 Lyons Brendan 2000 01 01 State Sees Only Minor Glitch Times Union Albany Hearst Newspapers p A5 Retrieved 2010 07 06 Odato James and Jay Jochnowitz 2001 09 12 Catastrophe Tests State Times Union Albany Hearst Newspapers p B1 Retrieved 2010 07 06 Professional knowledge Vendor Participant Directions to the Empire State Plaza amp Harriman State Office Campus for OGS Special Events shows amp festivals PDF State of New York Retrieved 2010 07 04 External links editEmporis dead link entry for Harriman Research and Technology Park including separate entries for Buildings 5 7A and 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title W Averell Harriman State Office Building Campus amp oldid 1111028479, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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