Right of Entry for Property Condition Assessment and Site Inspections
Contract Overview
Solicitation details, issuing organization, response deadlines, documents, and interested companies for this government contract opportunity.
AI Contract Overview
The Port of Long Beach has authorized a Right of Entry for a Property Condition Assessment and site inspections at a 15-story, approximately 230,549-square-foot office building located at 100 Oceangate Street in Long Beach, California, constructed in 1971. This activity, effective from July 13, 2026, through August 13, 2026, is intended to evaluate the property’s physical condition for potential acquisition and is limited to non-invasive visual surveys, inspections, and data collection without expanding existing use or causing environmental disturbance. The assessment will produce a comprehensive report detailing structural, mechanical, and environmental characteristics to support acquisition decisions. The project is exempt from full environmental review under California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) categorical exemptions Class 1 (Existing Facilities) and Class 6 (Information Collection), as the activities involve no new construction or significant environmental impact. No monetary value, pricing, or payment terms are specified, as this is not a procurement contract but a right of access authorization. Contact for the action is coordinated through the Port of Long Beach’s Environmental Planning Division and Real Estate Office, with Jennifer Williams serving as the primary point of contact for environmental planning and Eamonn Killeen as the Director of Real Estate. The assessment will be conducted on-site at the specified location, with no delivery or shipping requirements as the work is entirely service-based. No formal contract clauses from the Federal Acquisition Regulation are applicable, and the document functions as a forecast and environmental exemption notice rather than a competitive solicitation. There is no indication of contractor selection criteria, submission deadlines, offeror certifications, or technical standards beyond CEQA compliance. The action is administered under the agency’s own procedural and environmental review framework, with no inclusion of federal procurement elements such as accounting codes, invoicing systems, COR/COTR designations, or socioeconomic requirements. All activities are strictly confined to the designated 31-day window and are focused exclusively on gathering information for potential acquisition purposes.
General Info
Agency
NAICS
Place of Performance
Long Beach, CASet-Aside
