Trump team pitches White House ballroom, considers adding storey to part of West Wing

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Architect Shalom Baranes points to a rendering during a public hearing regarding the White House ballroom construction at the National Capital Planning Commission in Washington, DC, US, on Thursday, Jan. 8, 2026. The proposed White House ballroom will cost as much as $400 million, with President Donald Trump saying it will also be equipped to host inaugurations going forward. Photographer: Kent Nishimura/Bloomberg

The hearing was the first time that plans for the ballroom have been presented and discussed in a public setting.

PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

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WASHINGTON - US President Donald Trump’s aides began to make their case on Jan 8 for a US$400 million (S$514 million) White House ballroom before a commission that oversees federal building construction and said they are considering adding a second storey to part of the West Wing as well.

Mr Trump, a Republican who had the

East Wing of the White House demolished in 2025,

has championed the roughly 8,270 sq m project that will replace it.

The hearing was the first time that plans for the ballroom have been presented and discussed in a public setting. Architect Shalom Baranes, who took over the project late in 2025, told a meeting of the National Capital Planning Commission in Washington that the ballroom will be approximately 2,043 sq m and designed to accommodate 1,000 seated guests.

Mr Trump at one point had floated having a ballroom that could fit some 1,300 people, but Mr Baranes said the president’s team was not exploring an option to increase the project’s size.

The total area of the new East Wing, including two floors and the ballroom, would be slightly more than 8,268 sq m, he said. It will include a two-storey colonnade that connects the White House’s East Room to the new ballroom.

Mr Baranes said the administration was also considering a one-storey addition to the West Wing colonnade “to restore a sense of symmetry” to the overall White House complex.

In 2025, Mr Trump was seen walking on the roof of the press room, which is part of the West Wing and would likely be affected by such an addition.

Preservationists and opponents of the project have criticised the destruction of a part of the White House that housed the offices of the first lady and a movie theatre, and have raised concerns that it could dwarf the main mansion.

But a federal judge, while hearing a lawsuit alleging the project abuses presidential power, said in December that he was not inclined to order the administration to immediately halt the work.

Mr Trump’s aides have said they did not need approval for the demolition but are seeking a green light for the new build. Mr Baranes said on Jan 8 that the new structure would be the same height as the existing building.

When asked by one of the commissioners whether the height of the ballroom could be reduced, Mr Baranes said that was “not impossible”.

Some reservations amid broad support

In December, the White House submitted a formal application to the NCPC and the Commission of Fine Arts for the project. The NCPC is chaired by Mr Will Scharf, who serves as Mr Trump’s White House staff secretary.

Mr Scharf opened the meeting by saying the public would have a chance to comment on the project at an upcoming meeting and any interrupters on Jan 8 would be asked to leave. He did not have to make good on that threat.

Two commissioners expressed reservations about the size of the project. But most of the group offered broad support, including Mr Scharf, who echoed Mr Trump’s view that a ballroom was necessary for hosting state dinners with foreign dignitaries.

“I think it’s notable that when the president of the United States of America flies to the United Kingdom, he’s hosted at Windsor Castle,” Mr Scharf said. “When next year the, the king ... comes to the United States, more likely than not he will be hosted ... in a tent on the South Lawn with porta potties.”

Large state dinners have been hosted by US presidents in elaborately decorated tents on the White House grounds for years.

Mr Josh Fisher, the director of management and administration at the White House, said at the start of the presentation that Mr Trump’s team determined that old roofing, water intrusion, obsolete electrical infrastructure and other factors made demolition and reconstruction of the East Wing the most economical strategy for the project as a whole.

Plans to make improvements in Lafayette Park across from the White House and a “more efficient visitor security screening centre” would be submitted in the coming weeks and months, he said.

Before the East Wing demolition, Mr Trump had said the new ballroom would not touch the existing mansion.

An announcement in July, still available on the White House website, says the ballroom will be “substantially separated from the main building of the White House”. Demolition had already begun by the time the administration confirmed in October that the entire East Wing was being torn down.

Mr Trump wants the ballroom finished before his term concludes in three years. Last week, during his holiday trip to Florida, he perused marble and onyx options for the ballroom at an Italian stone importer. REUTERS

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