Petitioner appeals the Board of Zoning Adjustment’s (BZA’s) grant of a variance to Capitol Hill Associates, intervenors below, 1 under Section 8207.11 2 of the Zoning Regulations. Intervenors sought a use and area variance in order to extend Republican National Committee offices located in an R-4 district bordering the Capitol grounds.
Intervenors maintain that historical factors, the relationship with Congress, and *1095 past actions of the BZA and Zoning Commission create an “extraordinary or exceptional situation or condition” so as to fulfill the statutory variance requirement. 3 Inter-venors reason further that due to the same historical circumstances, they will suffer “undue hardship” if not allowed to expand according to plans of 20 years’ duration formed with the ostensible consent of the zoning authorities. Finally, intervenors maintain that the proposed building extension will not undermine the zone plan, but rather will provide a harmonious transition between the Capitol buildings and the surrounding residential neighborhood.
The BZA ruled with intervenors and granted a variance. Petitioner Monaco 4 argues primarily that the Board misapplied the variance law in finding unique circumstances and undue hardship in historical factors personal to intervenors and unrelated to the property in question. A secondary issue is whether the BZA’s finding of no detriment to the neighborhood is supported by substantial evidence. Petitioner also contends that the BZA admitted into the record intervenors’ proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law after the public hearing was concluded, violating its own rules and the District of Columbia Administrative Procedure Act. 5
The historical circumstances on which in-tervenors base their claim of exceptional situation and undue hardship began in 1960 when the United States government condemned Republican National Committee property in order to construct the Madison Library. Because of intervenors’ close relationship with Congress, they wished to relocate on the perimeter of the Capitol. They found and acquired other suitable property in an R-4 district one block to the south on First Street, S.E., running from “C” Street almost to “D” Street. The site of the present dispute includes roughly the southernmost third of that property, with the addition of lot # 816 on the corner of 1st and “D” Streets, acquired more recently.
In 1961, intervenors filed an application to the Zoning Commission to change the classification of the northern portion of their new site from an R-4 to an SP zone. An office building would have been permitted as of right in an SP zone, and would not have been subject to the R-4 height restrictions. The House Office Building Commission approved the relocation of Republican National Committee headquarters, but was concerned that height restrictions be maintained. After negotiations with interve-nors, the Zoning Commission, and the Architect of the Capitol, it was agreed that the Zoning Commission would defer decision of the zone change, and intervenors would proceed by means of a series of variances, which, unlike a zone change, could be conditioned on low building height.
A height limitation of 40 feet at the comer of 1st and “C” Streets, along with design restrictions, were embodied in a covenant between the House Office Building Commission and intervenors. This covenant was incorporated by reference in the grant of several variances to intervenors. The same covenant provided that the United States had a right of first refusal to purchase the land and improvements at the lesser of cost or fair market value.
Intervenors proceeded with their building plans in three parts: the Capitol Hill Club, and a two-stage office building. The BZA granted variances for the Capitol Hill Club in appeal # 6348 (June 21, 1961) and # 8288 (July 14, 1965); for the first stage of the office building in # 8183 (December 22, 1965); and for the second stage of the office building in # 8834 (November 8, 1966). Although the Capitol Hill Club and the first stage of the office building were completed, construction of the second stage was postponed for lack of funds. The vari- *1096 anee lapsed after six months. 6 This case is an appeal of the BZA’s grant of another variance for the stage two office building. The proposed office addition is designed to join the existing building and use the same engineering systems. It is slightly modified from the plan approved in the mid-1960’s in order to cover newly acquired lot # 816 and extend all the way to “D” Street.
A landowner must meet three requirements for a use variance: (1) unique physical aspect or “other extraordinary or exceptional situation or condition of a specific piece of property,” (2) undue hardship, and (3) no harm to the public or to the zone plan. 7 Petitioner claims that intervenors met none of the three requirements, and that the BZA applied an incorrect standard for determining uniqueness and undue hardship. Firstly, he contends that the physical aspect of the property must be unique. Here the subject site would equal four perfectly ordinary lots, suitable for permitted townhouses. Furthermore, because the land could be used for townhouses, says petitioner, intervenors would suffer no undue hardship by conforming to the R-4 zoning. Lastly, he claims that the expansion of an office building in a block developed primarily with row houses would deter the public good and undermine the integrity of the zone plan.
The BZA made a conclusion of law in respect to the first variance requirement, unique physical aspect or “other extraordinary or exceptional situation or condition of a specific piece of property.”
1. The subject site is affected by an exceptional situation as a result of the history of the creation of this property as the site upon which the Republican National Committee Office building would be located through previously granted variance relief. The property is also uniquely affected by an agreement between the House Office Building Commission and Capitol Hill Associates, Inc., which limits the use of the subject property to offices for the Republican National Committee and its affiliates, provides that all plans for exterior facades should be subject to the approval of the Architect of the Capitol and that the United States Government shall have the right of first refusal to purchase the property in the event of a sale of that premises to any person other than the Republican National Committee. The applicant has made major expenditures on the building and land on the basis of prior actions of the Zoning Commission and the Board of Zoning Adjustment.
A finding of fact is also relevant to the question of uniqueness:
11. [W]hen the Republican National Committee first embarked on the Eisenhower Center project it was the understanding of the Committee that an accommodation to provide space for it would be provided as the United States Government acquired its former site at First and Carroll Streets, S.E. by condemnation, that the applicant found it necessary to obtain another location in the Capitol Hill area because of its unique relationship with members of Congress and other personnel located on Capitol Hill and that this unique situation is evidenced by the existence of an agreement dated July 19, 1965, between the House Office Building Commission and Capitol Hill Associates, Inc.
In sum, the BZA considered four factors in applying the uniqueness or other extraordinary circumstances test:
A. The Republican National Committee’s close relationship to Congress and location of property near Congress;
B. existence of stage I of the office building;
*1097 C. past actions of the Zoning Commission and BZA which led them to begin construction in that location;
D. the right of first refusal and restrictive covenant held by the House Office Building Commission which limits the use and design of the building.
Petitioner maintains that none of these factors may be used to justify a variance. Rather, he contends the extraordinary circumstances must be limited to physical aspects of the land. We disagree with petitioner’s narrow interpretation of the phrase “other extraordinary or exceptional situation or condition of a specific piece of property.” Though we recently rejected the possibility that unique circumstances could refer to the personal misfortunes of the applicant or to the previous use of the property.
Capitol Hill Restoration Society, Inc. v. Board of Zoning Adjustment,
D.C.App.,
Those past actions are the critical factors which have caused the Republican National Committee’s present predicament. In
DeAzcarate v. District of Columbia Board of Zoning Adjustment,
D.C.App.,
[ i]n effect, the extraordinary or exceptional condition which is the basis for a use variance need not be inherent in the land, but can be caused by subsequent events extraneous to the land itself, such as the failure of [a] seminary to remain a viable institution . . . In our view, that term was designed to serve as an additional source of authority enabling the Board to temper the strict application of the zoning regulations in appropriate cases . . . . [Id. at 1237.]
The four factors which the court found significant in upholding the grant of a variance in
DeAzcarate
were (1) the original property owned by the variance applicant could have been divided into three conforming lots; (2) zoning office personnel, on three occasions, implicitly found that the lot in question conformed to area requirements; (3) applicant proceeded in good faith to rely on said division, and built houses on the other two newly created lots; and (4) the present dispute was caused by zoning officials’ erroneous action.
Id.
at 1238. Here, intervenors could originally have located elsewhere or possibly secured a zone change for the site. However, the Zoning Commission and House Office Building Commission implicitly approved the site and indicated that intervenors should proceed by means of variance. Moreover, the BZA granted variances for the greatest part of the project. Intervenors proceeded in good faith to construct the Capitol Hill Club and stage one of the office building and secured a variance for the second stage of the office as well. These actions by the zoning authorities provided implicit assurance that the project could be completed.
See Jayne Estates, Inc. v. Raynor,
Petitioner reasons that the grant of a variance in 1966 cannot be considered because it lapsed after six months and thus has no res judicata effect. Even though the variance for the final stage lapsed, in-tervenors’ reliance on eventual approval was nevertheless in good faith. As a New York court explained, the reason for having a time limitation on a variance “is to insure that in the event conditions have changed at the expiration of the period prescribed the board will have the opportunity to reap
*1098
praise the proposal by the applicant in the light of the then existing facts and circumstances if the latter still desires to proceed.”
In re Goodwin,
Sup.Ct.N.Y., N.Y.L.J., July 5, 1962, as quoted in 3 A. Rathkopf, The Law of Zoning and Planning § 38.06[2] (4th ed. 1979) (variance rights should not be lost through delay in exercise if conditions remain the same).
See also Madden v. Zoning Board of Review,
When the BZA reassessed the neighborhood and the project after the 12-year interval, it found circumstances were still favorable to the project. The intervenors rationally could have expected a favorable evaluation when the major change in the neighborhood was installation of the Metro across the street which would reduce the vehicular traffic effects on the surrounding neighborhpod. Thus, we find that interve-nors showed the same type of good faith detrimental reliance on zoning actions as was shown in DeAzcarate, where such zoning actions were found to contribute to uniqueness.
Given that the past zoning history can be taken into account in the uniqueness facet of the variance test, we now turn to an examination of the resulting situation as it exists today to assess whether the BZA erred in considering the needs of the Republican National Committee, the proximity of the site to the Capitol, the restrictive covenant, and existence of the first two buildings as contributing to uniqueness.
Petitioner relies upon this court’s decisions in
Taylor v. Board of Zoning Adjustment,
D.C.App.,
In Palmer, supra at 540, we held that the attempt or desire to utilize property for a certain use was not by itself enough to create an “extraordinary or exceptional situation or condition” under the zoning regulations, but we did not define precise limits to the phrase. Referring to decisions from other jurisdictions, the court did mention economic conditions, id. at 539, and character of surrounding uses, id. at 540, as possible criteria for determining uniqueness along with topography and geographic factors. The Republican National Committee’s wish to move to the subject site does not make the site unique. Nevertheless, the site is uniquely suitable for their headquarters because of the surrounding use, the Capitol. While a commercial user before the BZA might not be able to establish uniqueness in a particular site’s exceptional profit-making potential, we consider that the BZA may be more flexible when it assesses a non-profit organization which is a well established element of our governmental system. As Professor Anderson has observed, public need for the use is an important factor in granting or denying a variance and “the apparently objective standards of the enabling acts are applied differently to the several kinds of uses . .” 3 R. Anderson, American Law of Zoning § 14.78 (1968).
The restrictive covenant between in-tervenors and the House Office Building Commission provides evidence of the unique
*1099
relationship with Congress. The restrictions contained there also may be considered in their own right as an extraordinary condition of a particular piece of property, since they effectively restrict design, height, and use to that which the BZA considered compatible with surrounding residential and governmental properties. In
Capitol Hill Restoration Society v. Zoning Commission,
D.C.App.,
The fact that a building has already been constructed on the adjoining property is another factor which may be considered in finding uniqueness. In
Clerics of Saint Viator, Inc.
v.
District of Columbia Board of Zoning Adjustment,
D.C.App.,
The characterization of the use as a public service will again be significant. For example, “A commercial nonconforming user who needs parking facilities cannot satisfy the requirement for a use variance . without proving that the proposed site will not yield a reasonable return for a conforming use, that the difficulty is caused by unique circumstances, that the use will not materially alter the neighborhood. No such burden is usually imposed on a hospital.” 2 R. Anderson,
supra,
§ 1478. See also
Lincoln Central Association v. Zoning Board of Appeals,
Another significant factor in determining if inadequate buildings on one parcel may constitute extraordinary situation for another parcel is whether the two parcels are contiguous and under common ownership. Pennsylvania courts allow variances to be granted for the normal expansion of a non-conforming use. “But nowhere in the law is there any support for a proposition that any supposed hardship to one non-contiguous piece of property owned by a separate entity can be shown to support an application for a variance to expand a nonconforming use to a completely separate property.”
Snyder
v.
Zoning Hearing Board,
Consequently, we conclude that when a public service has inadequate facilities and applies for a variance to expand into an adjacent area in common ownership which has long been regarded as part of the same site, then the Board of Zoning Adjustment does not err in considering the needs of the organization as possible “other extraordinary and exceptional situation or condition of a particular piece of property.” Overall, the BZA considered permissible factors in applying the first branch of the *1100 variance test. The site’s proximity to the Capitol made it uniquely valuable to the Republican National Committee, a public service organization. The previously constructed buildings and the contiguous subject site can be considered together in applying the test especially because the past acts of the zoning authorities led interve-nors to rely in good faith on their eventual consent to the final stage of the building. This case, like DeAzcarate, illustrates that extraordinary circumstances can encompass the past zoning history, as well as the physical features, of the property.
Applicants’ good faith, detrimental reliance on previous zoning actions can also be relevant to determine undue hardships, the second branch of the variance test. The BZA property found undue hardship when
[t]he site located to the immediate south was acceptable to all parties involved at that time [1960’s] and it was planned that eventually an office structure to house the Committee would occupy the entire site . . .. To deny the present application would thwart that plan and force the Committee to relocate on a less favorable site after a substantial investment in the present area and after reliance upon prior understandings. [Conclusion of Law No. 3.]
It is true that normally an owner suffers no undue hardship when his property can produce a reasonable profit in a permitted use.
Palmer, supra
at 542;
Otto v. Steinhilber,
*1101
In this case, however, intervenors’ hardship stems from an additional factor not present in any of the cases cited by petitioner, namely, their reliance on actions of the zoning authorities in locating at their present site, in partially completing their facilities, and in forming a covenant with the House Office Building Commission which will greatly reduce the value of their present investment if intervenors should move to another site. If they were forced to move due to overcrowding, they could not realize a reasonable return on their substantial investment in the previously constructed building. They would have to offer their buildings to the House Office Building Commission at cost, not because of their own poor bargaining power, but because of their reliance that accommodation would be made to allow expansion at the present site. Thus, we conclude that good faith, detrimental reliance on the zoning authorities’ informal assurances may be taken into account in assessing intervenors’ undue hardship under variance law.
See Jayne Estates, Inc., supra; Iacobelli v. City of Rye,
64 App.Div.2d 888,
Even after an applicant has demonstrated uniqueness and undue hardship, applicant must still show the third element of the variance test, namely, that the variance will not harm the public or undermine the zone plan.
Jayne Estates, Inc., supra,
Our. inquiry is limited to whether findings are supported by reliable, probative and substantial evidence in the record as a whole, and whether the Board’s conclusions flow rationally from these findings.
Citizens Association of Georgetown, Inc. v. District of Columbia Zoning Commission,
D.C.App.,
Petitioner’s final claim is that the Board violated its own rules and the District of Columbia Administrative Procedure Act by receiving intervenors’ proposed order after the record was closed and issuing findings of fact and conclusions of law almost identical to those intervenors submitted. Moreover, the proposed order was never served on petitioner. Petitioner maintains that this violation amounted to a denial of due process in that he had no opportunity to submit rebuttal evidence or his own proposed order. Even though we strongly support the fundamental judicial principle “that the mind of the decider should not be swayed by materials which are not communicated to both parties and which they are not given an opportunity to controvert,”
Mazza v. Cavicchia,
BZA Supplemental Rules of Practice & Procedure § 4.71 provides that “[pjarties to the [BZA] proceeding may submit proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law for the consideration of the Board within such time as the presiding officer may direct.” Intervenors were proceeding in accordance with this rule. Petitioner was free to submit his own proposed findings of fact and order under the same rule. The rule implies that the proposed findings are for the consideration of the Board, not the other parties. As this court said about a substantially identical portion of the zoning regulations, “[W]e are unable to find anything in Title 20 of the D.C.Rules and Regulations requiring the proposed findings to be served upon other parties.”
Dupont Circle Citizens Association v. District of Columbia Board of Zoning Adjustment,
D.C.App.,
In support of his position petitioner cites three cases that stand for the proposition that an administrative tribunal violates due process when it considers matters which a party had no opportunity to rebut.
Gonzales v. United States,
Due process considerations differ with respect to evidence in the record and proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, as is shown by a number of challenges under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a) (in nonjury cases, court shall prepare findings of fact and conclusions of law). Courts have often decided who will win the suit, directed that party to submit findings of fact and conclusions of law, and then adopted those findings as its own. See J. Skelly Wright, The Nonjury Trial —Preparing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, Seminars for Newly Appointed U.S. District Judges, 159, 166 (West 1963). In effect, one counsel loses the opportunity for comment on the other party’s proposed findings, even if they are served on him according to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 5.
Although reviewing courts have frowned on this procedure, they have nevertheless held that the findings cannot be rejected out of hand on due process grounds. Such findings will be examined narrowly to see if they are supported by evidence in the record, but if supported, they will stand.
See United States v. El Paso Natural Gas Co.,
In conclusion, variance law is broad enough to relieve in some instances the strict application of the zoning regulations in cases where the applicant’s unique situation and undue hardship have been caused by good faith reliance on previous assurances of the zoning authorities. While the authorities’ actions may not be sufficient to warrant application' of estoppel, their actions may be considered under variance law which is designed to avoid harsh and unjust results in extraordinary situations like the present one. Under variance law, the neighborhood will be protected despite former laxity of zoning officials, because the third variance test must still be met, namely, the zone plan must not be undermined and the public must not be harmed. There was ample evidence in the record of this case to support the BZA’s conclusion that the variance does not harm the public interest. Accordingly we affirm.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Messrs. Brock and McManus are trustees for the Republican National Committee, beneficial owners of the property. Capitol Hill Associates, the applicant before the BZA, was under contract to convey the property to the Republican National Committee.
. District of Columbia Zoning Regulation § 8207.11, adopted pursuant to D.C.Code 1973, § 5-420, provides as follows:
8207.11. Where, by reason of exceptional narrowness, shallowness, or shape of a specific piece of property at the time of the original adoption of the regulations or by reason of exceptional topographical conditions or other extraordinary or exceptional situation or condition of a specific piece of property, the strict application of any regulation adopted under this Act would result in peculiar and exceptional practical difficulties to or exceptional and undue hardship upon the owner of such property, to authorize, upon an appeal relating to such property, a variance from such strict application so as to relieve such difficulties or hardship, provided such relief can be granted without substantial detriment to the public good and without substantially impairing the intent, purpose, and integrity of the zone plan as embodied in the zoning regulations and map.
. D.C.Code 1973, § 5-420, is substantially identical to Zoning Reg. § 8207.11, supra note 2.
. Mr. Monaco resides at 123 C Street, S.E., in the same block as the subject site.
.D.C.Code 1973, §§ 1-1501 — 1-1510.
. See Zoning Regs. §§ 8205.11, 8205.12.
.
See
D.C.Code 1973, § 5-420; Zoning Regs. § 8207.11,
supra
note 2;
Otto v. Steinhilber,
. Two other cases relied upon by petitioner illustrate the difficulty in applying the undue hardship test to nonprofit organizations. In
Lincoln Central Association v. Zoning Board of Appeals, supra,
. No reason appears why the Board of Zoning Adjustment should not follow the invariable practice of serving all filed papers upon each party to the adjudication, and we suggest that the Board do so in future.
