From Deseret News archives:

For sale: U.S. digs in exotic locations

Published: Tuesday, May 1, 2007 12:08 a.m. MDT
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WASHINGTON — Looking for a stately home or opulent office overseas? One in a posh neighborhood or overlooking an exotic capital? Maybe with a glorious or infamous past? The U.S. government may have a deal for you.

From Kinshasa to Katmandu, Bangkok to Bogota, U.S. embassies, ambassadorial residences and other diplomatic digs are up for sale as the State Department moves its employees to more secure locations, upgrades facilities and combines operations in multipurpose compounds.

Some 29 properties worth more than $205 million are now on the market in 21 countries, including a huge and historic embassy annex in the heart of London, large chancery buildings in Panama, Nicaragua and Nepal and homes fit for envoys extraordinary in Belize and Venezuela.

The former house of the No. 2 at the U.S. Embassy in Canada, once featured in a Paul Newman film, is also for sale, as is a magnificent manse in the steamy Indonesian capital of Jakarta and a gem with multiple swimming pools and tennis courts in Ivory Coast.

With an asking price of $180 million, the immense former Navy Annex fronting Grosvenor Square in London's Mayfair district is probably beyond most budgets. Ditto for the old U.S. Embassy in Nepal, $6 million, described as a "grand colonial estate."

But more modest accommodations — apartments and single-family houses once occupied by junior embassy officers in Peru and Poland — are available, too, to say nothing of commercial and industrial space in Congo, Cameroon, Mali and Thailand.

All have been declared "excess property" and listed for sale with private real estate brokers by the State Department's bureau of Overseas Buildings Operations, which manages more than 3,500 U.S. government properties in 193 countries.

Run by retired Army Gen. Charles E. Williams, the OBO is charged with ensuring that diplomatic facilities meet stringent safety requirements enacted after the 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania and tightened after 9/11.

Those that don't — many of which are too close to major thoroughfares — or can't be upgraded, with the exception of about 150 "culturally significant" properties and a handful of others given special waivers, must be abandoned by U.S. diplomats and most are put up for sale to the general public.

Bidding for the crown jewel, the massive 133,300 square-foot London property closed in mid-April after an intensive marketing campaign that focused on its suitability for conversion into a five-star hotel. A State Department team is now evaluating the offers.

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