Embassy of France, Washington, D.C.
Diplomatic mission to the United States From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Embassy of France in Washington, D.C., is the French diplomatic mission to the United States.
French Embassy, Washington, D.C. | |
---|---|
Location | Washington, D.C. |
Address | 4101 Reservoir Road, N.W. |
Coordinates | 38°54′49.27″N 77°4′40.63″W |
Ambassador | Laurent Bili |
It is located at 4101 Reservoir Road Northwest, Washington, D.C., just north of Georgetown University.[1] The embassy opened in 1984. With some 400 staffers, it is France's largest foreign embassy. The embassy represents the interests of France and French citizens in the United States and conducts the majority of diplomatic work on such interests within the U.S.
The embassy is headed by the French Ambassador to the United States, currently Laurent Bili . In addition to the standard diplomatic facilities, the compound includes La Maison Française, a cultural facility consisting of an auditorium, ballroom, and exhibition hall. Like many embassies, it regularly hosts events for the general public including concerts (e.g. baroque, classical, jazz, contemporary, pop and alternative music), films, dance, exhibitions, lectures and theatre.
In the 19th century, like most other embassies in Washington DC, the French rented houses and did not settle for a durable location. Its first permanent address was in the Beaux-Arts mansion at the corner of 16th Street and Kalorama Road NW, across the street from Meridian Hill Park, which is still extant. Mary Foote Henderson, a wealthy individual who lived nearby and had the ambition to develop the neighborhood as Washington's most upscale location, commissioned the building from architect George Oakley Totten Jr. for use by the French embassy in coordination with ambassador Jules Jusserand, who moved there upon building completion in 1907. The French state paid the rent to Henderson, then to her estate after her passing away in 1931.[2]
In 1936, the embassy purchased a larger property at 2221 Kalorama Road NW,[3] a 1910 Tudor Revival building in the then prestigious Kalorama neighborhood,[4] originally designed by the French-born American architect Jules Henri de Sibour for businessman William Watson Lawrence.[4]
By the early 1970s, the administrative roles of the embassy had expanded far beyond what they had been in the interwar era, and its services were scattered in buildings throughout Washington DC. In 1973, the French Government decided to build a new facility and purchased an eight-acre property next to Glover-Archbold Park. In 1975, government architect André Remondet won the design competition; construction works started in 1982 and was completed in late 1984.[5]
In February 2015, the Kalorama residence reopened after undergoing a $4.5 million renovation.[4] The home features art, mostly by French artists such as Pierre Bonnard, but also by non-French artists such as Igor Mitoraj.[4] The property at one point encompassed 3.6 acres,[4] but in 2017 the French government put an empty tract of 0.58 acres of the property up for sale.[3]
The embassy operates several services and offices, responsible for different areas of policy and for liaising with relevant American bodies. The most notable of the services are listed below.
The Chancery is the main diplomatic and political body. It is responsible for coordination with the American government on matters that affect France, particularly foreign policy. However, diplomacy is primarily conducted by the ambassador, leaving the chancery to liaise with the French government and coordinate with the Press Service in matters of public policy. The diplomats of the chancery take responsibility for a specific policy area and may stand in for the ambassador in his absence. The Chancery has attachés based in each of the ten regional consulates.[6]
The Press Service is responsible for the publication of the embassy's newsletter and magazine, as well as coordinating press releases and conferences, including the provision of designated spokesmen. The office also monitors American press coverage on issues pertaining to France and reports back to the ambassador and to Paris.[7]
These offices promote cooperation between the two countries on military and defense matters. The primary responsibility of the former is to facilitate liaison between the two government departments and the two nations' militaries, while latter oversees cooperation on matters of armaments and has responsibility for arms spending in the US as well as working with the US to develop new military technology. Both offices have a role to play in keeping the ambassador abreast of current defence issues and advising the Pentagon on French defence policy.[8]
The Cultural Services of the embassy is located at 972 Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, New York City. Its responsibility is to facilitate "cultural exchange" between the two nations, a role that can be creative, informative or merely administrative. The duties of the service include promoting French creative works in cultural and academic institutions from across France, with the help of the attachés in regional consulates.[9]
The Office of Science and Technology (OS&T) is tasked with:
OS&T is an active, reactive and proactive observer of scientific activity, technological innovations and their impact on the US society and beyond. OS&T is headquartered at the Washington, D.C. embassy and has teams at the French consulates of Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. OS&T collaborates with French research agencies, universities, engineering schools, and competitiveness clusters.
The Chateaubriand Fellowship Program, run by the Embassy of France, offers scholarships for US students to study in France.[11] Founded in 1981, the fellowship has provided semester- and year-long support to over 750 students in the humanities, social sciences, natural sciences, and technology.[12][13] The acceptance rate for the fellowship is between 6 and 8 percent annually.[14]
The program, which aims to promote French-US cooperation, is run by the Office for Science & Technology and the Cultural Services division.[15][16]
This is the office primarily concerned with maintaining and developing new trade links between the countries. For example, it assists French businesses trying to establish themselves in the US and vice versa. It also helps large and small French businesses which have long since established themselves in the American market, providing support and advice on economic and trade policies, both within the US and in France.[17]
This office represents the French Treasury in the United States and Canada. It works in close partnership with the Federal Reserve, the Department of the Treasury and French and American financial institutions. Its role is to develop French economic policy in conjunction with the aforementioned bodies and to explain the policies to the United States. It has two offices, one in the embassy and a second in New York, from where it can work with Wall Street in order to better develop monetary policy.[18]
The ambassador is also ultimately responsible for the 10 regional consulates:[19]
In 2006, an employee of the Cultural Service of the French Embassy was fired for the motive of being pregnant and Muslim, a judge ruled. "This may be the only time a U.S. court has extended the reach of the civil rights laws to extend to a foreign citizen, working for a foreign government on foreign soil at an embassy here in D.C." said Ari Wilkenfeld for NBC Washington.[30]