(Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

(Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

We know the Obamas are sticking around in D.C. following the end of the president’s term in January and renting a home in Kalorama until younger daughter Sasha finishes high school in the area.

Now, The Washington Post has found another piece of the post-presidency puzzle: where President Barack Obama will work. The Post reports he is leasing office space in Foggy Bottom, at the headquarters of the World Wildlife Fund located at 1250 24th Street NW.

An Obama spokesperson confirmed to The Post that the president will have office space in D.C., though did not say where.

In October, Obama said that redistricting reform would be a top priority for him after leaving office, working with a new group called the National Democratic Redistricting Committee alongside former Attorney General Eric Holder.

That announcement came before the election, when Obama seemed confident that Democrat Hillary Clinton would move into the White House when he moved out.

A week after Election Day, in a call with supporters and Organizing For America alums, he indicated that he would hold off on criticizing President-elect Trump until he left office. “Understand that I’m going to be constrained in what I do with all of you until I am again a private citizen. But that’s not so far off,” he said. “I will have some time for vacation, but you’re going to see me early next year, and we’re going to be in a position where we can start cooking up all kinds of great stuff to do.”

Some of that cooking, it seems, will be happening in Foggy Bottom.

He also told a group of Laotian youth in September that “in my own work as an ex-president, I’m hoping to continue working with young people through my presidential center,” which will be located in Chicago.

According to Google Maps, it’s less than a 30 minute walk from the WWF headquarters to the White House, in case Obama and Trump want to meet face-to-face and continue what the Wall Street Journal terms “an unlikely rapport.”