Government & Federal Building Restoration in Washington DC, Maryland & Virginia
Rose Restoration is a Washington DC federal and government building restoration contractor delivering marble, terrazzo, concrete, metal, and facade restoration scopes on federal, state, and institutional projects across DC, Maryland, and Northern Virginia. Bonded and insured, familiar with federal contracting requirements, prevailing-wage (Davis-Bacon) scopes, historic preservation protocols, and site security requirements. 47 years of experience at the U.S. Department of the Treasury, the Smithsonian, the National Gallery of Art, the IMF, and Marine Barracks Washington.
Trusted by federal, state, and institutional clients across DC
Rose Restoration has delivered government and federal building restoration and related services for:
- U.S. Department of the Treasury — Federal building
- Smithsonian Institution — Federal museum
- National Gallery of Art — Federal museum
- Marine Barracks Washington — Military historic
- International Monetary Fund (IMF) — Institutional HQ
- Virginia State Capitol — State government
Government & Federal Building Restoration in Washington DC — Quick Answers
Who does federal and government building restoration in Washington DC?
Rose Restoration is a Washington DC federal and government building restoration contractor serving federal, state, and institutional clients across DC, Maryland, and Virginia. Scopes include marble polishing, terrazzo restoration (historic cementitious and modern epoxy), concrete polishing, architectural metal refinishing, facade cleaning, and historic masonry. Named projects include the U.S. Department of the Treasury, the Smithsonian, the National Gallery of Art, the IMF, Marine Barracks Washington, and the Virginia State Capitol.
Does Rose Restoration handle federal contracting requirements?
Yes. Rose Restoration is familiar with federal contracting requirements including Davis-Bacon prevailing-wage scopes, certified payroll, E-Verify, FAR compliance, small-business teaming, SAM.gov registration (in progress per ongoing work), historic preservation protocols under the Secretary of the Interior's Standards, and site security requirements for federal, military, and sensitive institutional sites.
Is Rose Restoration bonded and insured for federal projects?
Yes. Rose Restoration is fully bonded, insured, and licensed in Washington DC, Maryland, and Virginia. Certificates of insurance are issued per project and federal-project-specific bonding is available. Rose has delivered bonded specialty subcontract scopes on federal projects including Marine Barracks Washington and the U.S. Department of the Treasury.
What scopes does Rose Restoration deliver on government projects?
Rose Restoration delivers single-source specialty scopes on government projects: marble floor and wall restoration, historic cementitious terrazzo restoration, concrete polishing and grind-and-seal, granite restoration, architectural metal refinishing (brass, bronze, stainless on elevator cabs, handrails, memorial plaques), grout and tile, resinous flooring, facade cleaning, historic masonry cleaning, and coordinated multi-scope packages on larger renovations.
Does Rose Restoration work on historic federal buildings?
Yes. Rose Restoration has 47 years of historic federal and institutional project experience — including the Smithsonian Institution, the National Gallery of Art, Marine Barracks Washington, the U.S. Department of the Treasury, and the Virginia State Capitol. Historic work uses preservation-appropriate methods (soft washing under 500 PSI, substrate-matched chemistry, test patches before full-scale work) and coordinates with historic review boards, preservation architects, and landmark requirements.
Rose Restoration is the DC metro area’s specialist in restoring surfaces at government buildings, historic structures, and listed properties — marble, stone, terrazzo, metal, wood, and masonry. Since 1978, we’ve worked on federal buildings, state capitols, embassy compounds, historic hotels, National Register properties, and cultural institutions throughout Washington DC, Maryland, and Virginia. Preservation-grade methodology is our default — not a special mode reserved for rare jobs.
Free on-site assessment: online form or (703) 327-7676
Government & Historic Surfaces We Restore
- Marble — formal rooms, legislative chambers, lobbies, staircases, public corridors, and ceremonial spaces. Both historic original marble and period-appropriate replacement installations.
- Terrazzo — mid-century institutional floors in government offices, courthouses, museums, schools, and hospitals. Original 1930s–1970s terrazzo still has decades of life with proper restoration.
- Natural stone exteriors — limestone, sandstone, granite cladding and architectural details on federal and historic buildings. Weathering, pollution staining, efflorescence, and previous inappropriate repairs all addressed.
- Historic brick and masonry — Federal-era and 19th-century brick in government and historic buildings. Lime-mortar repointing preserves original brick by matching the building’s original mortar specifications.
- Metal — bronze and brass on door hardware, ceremonial fittings, historic plaques, railing systems, elevator surrounds, and decorative features. Period-appropriate restoration preserves original patina.
- Wood — historic interior paneling, doors, millwork, and architectural wood. Preservation-grade finishes and methodology.
- Concrete — polished concrete in modern additions, plus historic concrete restoration where appropriate.
Federal, State, and Municipal Government Buildings
Washington DC has the densest concentration of government buildings in the country. Rose Restoration has been doing government facility work across the DC metro area for 47 years, and we understand the operational requirements that come with it:
- Federal buildings. Cabinet-level offices, congressional office buildings, federal courthouses, independent agency headquarters, and specialized facilities. We work under GSA contract vehicles and individual agency contracts, with security clearance protocols standard.
- State government. Virginia State Capitol, Maryland state offices, and state-level government facilities requiring preservation-grade work on historic buildings and standard restoration on modern facilities. See our Virginia State Capitol case study.
- Municipal buildings. DC government offices, Alexandria city buildings, Montgomery County facilities, Fairfax County government buildings, and municipal offices throughout the region.
- Military installations. Active military bases and ceremonial facilities including historic installations like Marine Barracks Washington. See our Marine Barracks case study.
- Diplomatic and international. Embassies, diplomatic residences, and international organization headquarters. See our IMF Headquarters case study.
- Federal courthouses. Both historic Federal courthouses with period-appropriate original materials and modern federal judicial facilities.
Government Contracting & Compliance
- Security clearance compliance. Standard badge, escort, and after-hours access protocols. Our crew routinely works in facilities with strict entry controls.
- Prevailing wage requirements. Federal and some state contracts require prevailing wage compliance — we handle Davis-Bacon and state equivalents.
- Contract vehicle familiarity. GSA schedule work, agency-specific contracts, indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity (IDIQ) arrangements.
- Operational continuity. Government buildings operate year-round. Restoration happens overnight, in phased sections, with buildings fully operational the next business day.
- Discretion. We don’t photograph restricted spaces or share project specifics. Confidentiality protocols standard on sensitive government work.
Historic Buildings & National Register Properties
Washington DC has one of the country’s richest inventories of historic buildings, but historic restoration work spans our entire service area — from Richmond to Annapolis to the eastern shore. National Register properties, historic-district buildings, and landmark-designated structures all require preservation-grade methodology.
Our Preservation-Grade Approach
- Secretary of the Interior Standards compliance. The federal standards for treatment of historic properties govern all our listed-building work. Every material, every technique, every product aligned to the appropriate standard (Preservation, Restoration, Rehabilitation, or Reconstruction).
- Minimal-intervention philosophy. Preserve as much original material as possible. Repair before replacing. Restore rather than demolish. This is both the preservation ideal and the economic reality — original historic materials are typically irreplaceable.
- Period-appropriate methodology. 18th-century brick needs lime-based mortars, not modern portland. Historic marble needs pH-neutral chemistry, not aggressive modern strippers. Historic metal needs patina preservation, not refinishing to new-looking. Doing it right the first time extends building life by decades.
- Reversibility. Where possible, our interventions are designed to be reversible — future conservators should be able to undo our work if better methods emerge.
- Documentation. Complete before/during/after photography and written notes for permanent preservation files.
- Preservation-office coordination. Where required, we coordinate with State Historic Preservation Officers (SHPOs), National Park Service, local architectural review boards (like Alexandria’s Old & Historic Alexandria District Board of Architectural Review), and preservation architects.
Historic Buildings We’ve Worked On
- Museums and cultural institutions — including Smithsonian museums and the National Gallery of Art. See our case studies: Smithsonian Institution and National Gallery of Art.
- Historic hotels — including Four Seasons Hotel DC and Cavalier Hotel Virginia Beach. See our Four Seasons DC case study and Cavalier Hotel case study.
- Historic government buildings — Virginia State Capitol, Marine Barracks Washington, federal buildings throughout DC. See Virginia State Capitol and Marine Barracks Washington.
- Historic private properties. Historic townhouses in Georgetown, Capitol Hill, Foggy Bottom, Kalorama, and Old Town Alexandria. Pre-1920s brick repointing, historic marble restoration, original hardware preservation.
- Historic country clubs. Congressional Country Club and other historic clubs. See our Congressional Country Club case study.
- Historic commercial. 19th-century commercial buildings, historic storefronts, and landmark commercial structures throughout the DC metro.
Our Restoration Process for Government & Historic Work
Assessment & Scope
Every engagement starts with a thorough on-site assessment. For historic buildings, this includes identifying original vs later materials, documenting existing conditions, noting previous repair interventions (whether appropriate or not), and developing a scope that respects the building’s architectural significance.
Mock-Ups & Sample Approval
For significant historic work, we produce mock-ups on non-public or test surfaces before executing on visible areas. This lets preservation architects, historic preservation offices, and facility management approve the methodology before we commit to larger-scale work.
Conservation-Grade Chemistry
pH-neutral, museum-appropriate chemistry on all historic surfaces. No acidic cleaners, no aggressive strippers, no sealers with solvents that could damage historic materials. What we use on a 1920s marble lobby is different from what we use on a 2020 commercial install — and getting that right matters.
Period-Appropriate Mortars (Masonry)
For historic masonry: Type N or Type O lime-based mortars for most pre-1920s buildings, Type K pure lime for pre-1900 soft brick, Type S portland-based for modern work. Mortar matching includes sand analysis, pigment matching, and hardness verification. Mock-ups demonstrate the match before full-scale repointing begins.
Period-Appropriate Finishes (Metal & Wood)
Historic brass and bronze preserve original patina — we don’t refinish to new-looking. Historic wood gets period-appropriate finishes (shellacs, linseed oil, hand-rubbed polishes) rather than modern polyurethane where the building’s historic designation requires it.
Documentation & Preservation Files
Photography, written notes, and condition documentation for all listed-building work. For buildings under architectural review, we work with preservation offices to meet documentation requirements.
Why Rose Restoration for Government & Historic Work
- 47 years of DC region experience. Our team has worked on hundreds of government, institutional, and historic properties throughout Washington DC, Virginia, Maryland, and the broader mid-Atlantic region.
- In-house crew of 35+ technicians. Same Rose crew on every visit — continuity matters for multi-year institutional and historic maintenance programs. No subcontractors.
- Preservation-grade methodology as default. Not a special mode — it’s how we approach any pre-1930s building regardless of formal designation.
- Multi-material capability. One coordinated team handles marble + stone + brick + metal + wood + terrazzo + concrete. Essential for multi-material historic buildings where everything needs coordinated restoration.
- Security clearance familiarity. Standard government facility protocols routinely handled.
- Preservation-office coordination. Experience working with SHPOs, local architectural review boards, and preservation architects.
- Discretion and confidentiality. No photography of restricted spaces. No promotional sharing of sensitive government or historic property specifics.
- Overnight and phased scheduling. Zero operational impact on government buildings, historic hotels, museums, or institutional properties during work.
Case Studies — Government & Historic Portfolio
Rose Restoration’s government and historic restoration case studies include:
- IMF Headquarters — international institution restoration
- Smithsonian Institution — museum conservation-grade work
- National Gallery of Art — Tennessee pink marble restoration
- Virginia State Capitol — National Historic Landmark
- Marine Barracks Washington — historic military installation
- Four Seasons Hotel DC — luxury hospitality marble program
- Cavalier Hotel & Beach Club — historic coastal hotel
- Congressional Country Club — historic private club
- See all case studies →
Related Services for Government & Historic Buildings
- Marble Restoration — formal rooms, lobbies, staircases
- Masonry Repointing — historic brick with appropriate lime mortars
- Terrazzo Restoration — mid-century institutional floors
- Metal Polishing & Restoration — historic bronze, brass, stainless
- Commercial Wood Restoration — historic millwork and interior wood
- Concrete Polishing — modern additions
- Commercial Restoration Services
- Hotel & Hospitality Restoration
- Specialty Subcontractor for GCs
Get a Free Assessment for Your Government or Historic Property
Free on-site assessment for federal, state, municipal, military, diplomatic, historic, preservation-grade, and National Register properties throughout Washington DC, Maryland, Virginia, and the mid-Atlantic region.
Call: (703) 327-7676 | Online: request a free assessment
Featured Projects
Real Rose Restoration projects at trophy DC metro clients — see the full case studies.




