Planning
Commission Votes to Advance Trump’s Plan for Towering Arch
The
National Capital Planning Commission received nearly 1,700 comments about
President Trump’s plans to build a 250-foot arch in the nation’s capital.
Almost all opposed the idea.
Luke
Broadwater
By Luke
Broadwater
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/04/us/politics/trump-arch-dc-planning-meeting.html
June 4,
2026
A federal
planning commission on Thursday advanced President Trump’s plan to build a
250-foot arch in Washington, even after receiving overwhelming public
opposition to the project.
The
National Capital Planning Commission, which is led by allies of Mr. Trump,
received nearly 1,700 public comments about the proposed triumphal arch, almost
all of which opposed it. Staff at the commission also raised several issues
about the plan, including whether the structure could disrupt flight patterns
or violate laws restricting the height of buildings in the nation’s capital.
“The
project team has some homework to do,” said the commission’s chairman, Will
Scharf, who also serves as Mr. Trump’s White House staff secretary. He added,
“I think that it is fitting and proper that we commemorate the 250th
anniversary of our great republic with a suitable piece of monumental
architecture.”
The panel
voted 9 to 1 to advance the project to the next step in its review process,
while incorporating the staff’s comments about the need for additional
information and compliance with the existing laws. The project must return to
the panel for a final approval.
Mr. Trump
later posted on social media that he was grateful, extending a “very big THANK
YOU” to the commission, though he mischaracterized the vote as an approval to
actually build the arch.
One
potential hurdle to the project is the federal Height of Buildings Act, which
generally does not allow buildings that are more than 160 feet tall in
Washington.
But Mr.
Scharf said he believed that a strong legal argument could be made that the
plans for the arch do not need to follow legal restrictions for height limits
in Washington.
“I
believe, speaking personally, that the best reading of the law is that the
Height of Buildings Act is not applicable to federal construction,” he said.
Staff for
the panel also said the president’s proposal lacked adequate information about
building materials, proposed lighting and storm water management compliance,
according to a document prepared by the group before the meeting on Thursday.
The panel instructed the Trump administration to come back to present a more
detailed plan.
The
commission is the federal government’s planning agency for the Washington,
D.C., region and could vote to block construction of the arch. But because
Republicans and employees of Mr. Trump control a majority of the votes on the
panel, it is not expected to do so.
One
federal advisory panel, the Commission of Fine Arts, has already granted
approval for the project after the president made some modest changes to its
design, including removing plans for statues of gold lions perched along the
arch.
The
future of the project is still uncertain, however.
The
Federal Aviation Administration is reviewing whether it could pose an aerial
hazard, an evaluation that it requires for all structures more than 200 feet
tall. The arch would sit about a mile from a Pentagon heliport and about two
miles from Ronald Reagan National Airport, one of the country’s busiest flight
hubs.
A group
of Vietnam War veterans has sued to stop construction, citing the lack of
congressional approval for the project and arguing that the arch would obstruct
the view between the Lincoln Memorial and Arlington National Cemetery. The
Trump administration has argued that congressional actions in the 1920s
connected to the design of the Arlington Memorial Bridge already give it the
legal right to build the arch.
Many
critics of the plan have contended that the grandeur of the structure would
detract from the solemnity that should be observed at the cemetery nearby.
In
comments to the National Capital Planning Commission, which the commission
posted online, many said that the arch would be a monument more to Mr. Trump
than to the country. (Mr. Trump underscored that belief when he was asked by a
reporter whom the arch was for and he replied, “Me.”)
“Please
don’t build this monstrous vanity project to please Trump,” said one letter,
signed by Jane Allison.
Another,
signed by Ann Trowbridge, criticized the arch’s “ugly, garish design” and said,
“It is too tall, a waste of current and future taxpayers’ money and will
permanently scar the federal landscape of both Arlington and Washington.”
Some,
however, supported the project. “I think the arch will look fantastic,” Will
Nance wrote. “I can’t think of a better way to commemorate our 250th
anniversary as a country.”
Davis
Ingle, a White House spokesman, said the proposed arch would “enhance the
visitor experience at Arlington National Cemetery for veterans” and serve as a
“visual reminder” of the sacrifices made by Americans through the country’s
history.
“The
triumphal arch in Memorial Circle is going to be one of the most iconic
landmarks not only in Washington, D.C., but throughout the world,” Mr. Ingle
said.
Luke
Broadwater covers the White House for The Times.


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