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CGI Building in Fairfax sells for $55.3M

The CGI Building in Fairfax sold for $55.3 million on Oct. 5.

Located at 12601 Fair Lakes Circle, the 10-story office building is 259,511 square feet and occupies 8.36 acres. It is 88% leased to four tenants, primarily government contractors, and anchored by CGI Federal Inc., part of CGI Inc. The property was recently renovated in a $6.4 million capital improvement plan.

Cognac Fair Lakes LLC sold the property to Opal Holdings. Newmark Group Inc.’s Executive Managing Directors James Cassidy and Jud Ryan represented the seller.

 

CGI Federal names new president

Stephanie Mango, a 25-year employee at Fairfax County-based CGI Federal, has been promoted as its president, parent company CGI Inc. announced Monday. She replaces Tim Hurlebaus, who is taking on a new role as president of CGI’s U.S. commercial and state government operations.

Hurlebaus, in turn, takes the place of Dave Henderson, who is now president of CGI’s global IP solutions.

A government contractor that works with more than 85 government agencies on defense, civilian, health care and intelligence projects, CGI Federal employs 7,000 people in the U.S. Mango was most recently senior vice president and leader of CGI’s security, assistance, justice and health business unit, where she oversaw the company’s mergers with Sunflower Systems and TeraThink Corp. CGI Federal is a subsidiary of CGI Inc., which is one of the largest independent IT and business consulting firms in the world.

Tim Hurlebaus, president of CGI’s U.S. commercial and state government operations

“I am honored to take the helm of such a remarkable organization that provides mission-critical services to help agencies enhance citizen engagement, accelerate digital transformation, protect America’s assets, modernize operations and empower the federal workforce of the future,” Mango said in a statement. “I’ve seen firsthand how the contributions of our members have shaped the success of our clients, our business and our communities, and I am excited about the road ahead of us.”

In addition to her work duties, Mango is vice chair for the American Council for Technology, a member of the Industry Advisory Council’s executive committee and a founding member of Chief Washington D.C., a network for women leaders.

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CGI Inc. awarded $137M contract to overhaul Va. procurement system

Global IT company CGI Inc., which has its U.S. headquarters in Fairfax, announced Tuesday it has been awarded a $137.8 million contract by the Virginia Department of General Services (DGS) to support “transformational enhancements” to the state government’s eVA online procurement system.

eVA provides a centralized, online purchasing hub for state and local agencies to choose goods and services from more than 112,000 approved vendors. CGI was selected to modernize the eVA platform with next-generation technologies, tools and capabilities. The contract runs from Feb. 1, 2021 through Dec. 31, 2031.

The contract includes a transition to more modern and user-friendly procurement and reporting tools for state and local government users, as well as businesses and public users who desire to understand what public bodies are purchasing.

Through the new contract, CGI will deliver:
– An enhanced shopping experience, including better catalog maintenance and buyer tools
– Improved supplier services, such as electronic order delivery, contracts, catalogs and improvement plans
– Enhanced collaboration between users and suppliers
– Increased standardization across functions to make it easier to use
– New smart routing and workflow functions to increase process efficiency

Since launching in 2001, eVA has processed 12.6 million purchase orders worth $127 billion. The system currently serves 245 state agencies and more than 1,000 local jurisdictions. eVA has also provided emergency procurement information related to the COVID-19 pandemic response, connecting vendors and suppliers with state purchasing contracts.

“CGI is excited to extend our partnership with the Department of General Services, where together we will implement a new, market-leading, unified platform with a modern user experience for procurement functions based on a highly flexible and configurable model, said Lynne Bushey, CGI senior vice president and U.S. mid-Atlantic business unit leader, in a statement.

Founded in 1976 and based in Canada, CGI is among the largest independent IT and business consulting services firms in the world. With 76,000 consultants and other professionals worldwide, CGI’s services include strategic IT and business consulting, systems integration, managed IT and business process services and intellectual property solutions. CGI reported $12.16 billion in revenue for fiscal 2020.

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