Trump’s
Ballroom Design Has Barely Been Scrutinized
Architects
Say It Shows
President
Trump’s ballroom has rushed toward construction, with little time for public
review of this major addition to the White House.
Critics
warn it still has many issues — its portico is too big, its stairs lead
nowhere, its columns will block views from inside the ballroom.
And
that’s just the portico.
These are
the kinds of details that are normally scrutinized in the design of any
building so significant — and in the review that public projects face in the
nation’s capital. But barring a judge’s intervention, the ballroom is set to
move forward this week anyway.
By Emily
Badger, Junho Lee and Larry Buchanan
Junho Lee
is a trained architect, Larry Buchanan studied fine arts, and Emily Badger has
long written about urban planning.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2026/03/29/upshot/white-house-ballroom.html
March 29,
2026
The
National Capital Planning Commission is scheduled on Thursday to take a final
vote approving President Trump’s ballroom, clearing the last review for a major
addition to the White House that was publicly unveiled in detail only in
January. Last month, another panel led by the president’s allies, the
Commission of Fine Arts, discussed the ballroom for 12 minutes before
unanimously approving it.
The
hurried reviews, with construction cranes already swiveling above the White
House grounds, are an abrupt departure from how new monuments, museums and even
modest renovations have been designed and refined in the capital for decades.
And the ballroom will be worse off for it, architects warn.
Take the
White House fence, a far more modest part of the complex that received more
probing attention from both commissions when it was rebuilt during Mr. Trump’s
first term.
Total
pier width
Fence to
pier connection detail
Post top
design
Pier
joint size
Spacing
between pickets
Pier base
height
The White
House fence was redesigned to be taller and more secure.
The White
House fence was redesigned to be taller and more secure.
Over nine
months of public meetings, the National Capital Planning Commission weighed in
on the size of the fence piers, the decorative tops, the thickness of the
pickets and the spacing between them (a 5½-inch gap was determined to best
secure the White House without making it appear imprisoned).
Or the
renovation to the Federal Reserve Board headquarters, an ongoing project a few
blocks from the White House that has attracted the president’s attention, too.
New
skylights were planned to enclose an atrium in the Eccles Building. But the
planning commission wanted to ensure that change wasn’t visible to pedestrians
taking in the original 1930s-era building from Constitution Avenue.
This
combination of color and luster
Or the
Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture, which
opened just south of the White House in 2016 with a signature facade of ornate
panels.
The
Commission of Fine Arts was deeply involved in selecting the bronze-like finish
on the panels (after months of debate and in-person testing, it endorsed the
“five-coat bronze-colored polymeric painted finish identified as Custom Artisan
#3.5”).
The
Commission of Fine Arts was deeply involved in selecting the bronze-like finish
on the panels (after months of debate and in-person testing, it endorsed the
“five-coat bronze-colored polymeric painted finish identified as Custom Artisan
#3.5”).
Such
details affect how people passing by experience these iconic places, and how
each structure fits into a capital city that has been planned around civic
symbols and sightlines since the 1790s. The deliberation is also an expression
of democracy, said Carol Quillen, the president and chief executive of the
National Trust for Historic Preservation, which has sued the administration
over the ballroom.
“Even if
we are slow and we make mistakes and we fight, that process has meaning to us,”
Ms. Quillen said. No project belonging to the public should be the vision of
just one man, she said.
That is,
however, how the ballroom has often been described.
“President
Trump is the best builder and developer in the entire world, and the American
people can rest well knowing that this project is in his hands,” Davis Ingle, a
White House spokesman, said in a statement. Past administrations and presidents
have wanted a ballroom for more than 150 years, he said, and Mr. Trump will
accomplish it.
But in
the sprint to complete it before the end of his term, the addition appears to
have compressed the normal design evolution for any project.
As
recently as October, the president was still increasing the ballroom’s
capacity, the kind of decision needed at the concept stage. And the White House
has said it plans to begin building in the spring, a timeline that would mean
construction documents would have to be prepared even as the design was still
under review. (Before a judge demanded in December that the project seek review
by these two commissions, the administration appeared poised to skip them
entirely.)
“The
timeline never made any sense to me,” said Thomas Gallas, a former member of
the planning commission who long led a design and planning firm. A building on
this scale might take its architects and engineers 18 months to two years from
initial concept to completed construction documents, he said.
Reviews
by the planning commission generally follow similar steps, with major projects
seeking feedback on initial concepts, then approval of preliminary plans, and
then final approval. The public process for the Fed renovations took two years,
the African American history museum even longer:
Timelines
do not include staff consultations, which often begin well in advance of the
first public meeting.
For the
ballroom, the planning commission never had a say on the concept design. And
this week, it will vote on a combined preliminary and final review, a move more
common for antenna replacements or new security bollards. The Commission of
Fine Arts did something similar in February.
Rodney
Mims Cook Jr., the Trump-appointed chair of the arts panel, countered that the
group had significant input, including in unofficial meetings with Mr. Trump
and in feedback objecting to a large pediment previously planned for the top of
the ballroom’s south portico. “We asked him to tone down the porch,” he said.
“We asked him to remove the pediments. We asked him for landscape. All of that
he did.”
Will
Scharf, the chair of the planning commission and the White House staff
secretary, said his commission had handled the ballroom with the same
deliberative pace it has other analogous projects, like an overhaul of the
Capital One Arena and the plan for a new R.F.K. Stadium. Those projects, he
said, share the ballroom’s sense of urgency and ready funding (characteristics
a memorial or museum may not have).
“If not
for President Trump, his desire to move quickly, and his raising the money to
fund this, a project like this could languish for years with no decision or
action,” Mr. Scharf said. “And we could still be debating it at N.C.P.C.
meetings 20 years from now.”
Some big
projects in Washington have been bogged down for years. And it’s certainly
possible that the White House fence would have been just fine with five inches
between the pickets, and that the African American history museum would have
looked nice with a Custom Artisan #4 finish instead.
But it’s
harder to argue that a major addition to the White House needs swifter public
scrutiny than its fence (these commissions have meanwhile continued to push
back on projects that are not the president’s personal priorities). Many
concerns about the ballroom are also not minor ones. And without further work,
the details provoking those concerns will become lasting features of the
capital.
For
starters, the ballroom is set to become the dominant anchor at the end of
Pennsylvania Avenue, a link planned by Pierre Charles L’Enfant to connect the
Capitol and the White House.
“The
ballroom is literally an imposition between two branches of our government,”
said David Scott Parker, an architect on the board of the National Trust for
Historic Preservation, and one of more than 30,000 people who wrote to the
planning commission objecting to the building.
The
proposed East Wing is about 60 percent larger than the White House residence by
floor area. But by cubic volume, and including the porticos, it’s more than
three times as large because of the ballroom’s vast ceiling height. Viewed from
the south, the ballroom’s size will make it the dominant building of the White
House complex, with a portico bigger than that of the residence and a lopsided
appearance disrupting any symmetry with the West Wing.
The south
portico, which was not part of the addition’s initial design, also has no doors
into the ballroom. And all of the columns will block views and daylight from
inside.
During
the planning commission review earlier this month, the project’s architect,
Shalom Baranes, acknowledged that the south portico was more ornamental than
functional.
“Is it an
absolutely essential part of the program? I would say no, it’s not,” he said.
“Really it’s an aesthetic decision to have it there.”
That
decision, however, is part of the reason the White House driveway planned by
the famed landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted must be rerouted, breaking
its symmetry (the kind of detail the planning commission might have dwelled on
in the past).
Inside
the East Wing, the ballroom itself is far larger than industry standards
suggest is necessary for 1,000 guests (by that standard, it might fit 1,500
people). Mr. Baranes said the extra space was needed to accommodate TV cameras,
journalists, security and ceremonial processions. But one result is that events
with fewer than 1,000 people could feel empty.
The
commercial kitchen and first lady’s office suite on the lower level are
likewise supersized. And on the second-floor colonnade connecting the ballroom
to the executive residence, a wall with masonry niches designed to look like
windows will face the north (the direction from which most tourists get a
glimpse of the White House). Behind them is a row of bathroom stalls.
Many
criticisms of the building, Mr. Scharf said, fail to acknowledge that the White
House has continually evolved since its beginning. “As our country’s developed,
so too has the White House complex,” he said, adding that he would vote on the
project this week after having read every one of the letters the commission
received. “I see the ballroom project as a natural extension of that history.”
Most of
the concerns that have been raised touch not on how the building will be used
inside, but on how it will face the public. That makes seemingly prosaic
matters — the height of the roofline, the jog in the road, the square footage
of the ballroom — also symbolic ones.
“This is
the People’s House, this is not Donald Trump’s, or Joe Biden’s or the next
president’s,” said Phil Mendelson, who sits on the planning commission in his
role as the chairman of the D.C. Council. He has been a lone objector trying to
raise these questions before the commission.
Now,
barring intervention by the courts, time is apparently up to resolve them.
“I still
don’t understand,” Mr. Mendelson said, “why the ceiling height has to be 40
feet.”
Luke
Broadwater contributed reporting.
Correction:
March 29, 2026
An
earlier version of this article misstated a job title for Thomas Gallas. He led
a design and planning firm; he’s not an architect.

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