
On Jan. 22, federal design commissioners declined to move forward with the White House ballroom proposal, requesting physical models and additional materials, indicating the project remains stuck at an early stage in the federal approval process even though demolition is complete and underground work is underway.
The United States Commission on Fine Arts, which is responsible for reviewing design proposals for structures in Washington, DC, held a discussion of the proposal but did not record votes or offer recommendations. Commissioners raised questions about scale, mass and how the addition would integrate with the White House campus, the Associated Press reported. The curators asked the project representatives to return with physical or three-dimensional models before further evaluation.
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The meeting also marked the commission’s first review of the ballroom since President Donald Trump fired all six sitting commissioners on Oct. 27, 2025, disabling the body for months by depriving it of a quorum. On January 16, Trump quietly appointed four new members, enough to reconstitute the group of seven and convene the session.
The AP said commissioners also noted that public comments submitted before the meeting were largely critical, reflecting concerns about both the design and the process by which the project has moved forward.
In large-scale design review, especially for prominent public projects, a request for physical or three-dimensional models typically indicates that reviewers are still evaluating fundamental issues of scale and context rather than refining architectural details. Procedurally, it places the ballroom at an early stage in the approval process, although work on the site has already progressed.
The design discussion developed alongside parallel legal scrutiny that could affect construction sequencing. Later in the day, a federal judge heard arguments in a lawsuit filed by the National Trust for Historic Preservation that sought to halt further work while necessary federal review processes are completed. Reuters reported that the court questioned whether the demolition and initial activity moved forward before legal approvals, but did not issue a ruling or indicate when a decision would be made.
Administration officials have repeatedly described the ballroom as privately funded. However, Thursday’s developments reinforced that projects on federally controlled properties remain subject to federal design and preservation oversight, regardless of the funding source.
From a construction point of view, weather is the central risk. Advancing demolition or enabling work before obtaining approvals can expose projects to redesign requirements, schedule delays, or additional federal obligations if regulatory agencies require changes later.
The Fine Arts Commission plays an advisory role in reviewing projects that affect the appearance of federal buildings and monumental spaces in Washington, DC. Its recommendations are part of a larger approval framework that typically includes the National Capital Planning Commission and, for historic resources, consultation under federal preservation law.
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No timeline was given for when the revised materials would be submitted or when the commission might review the ballroom proposal. Similarly, the court did not set a timetable for a decision after the motion hearing.
As a result, the project now finds itself in an unusual position: demolition completed, formal design review still preliminary and litigation unresolved, conditions that could shape the schedule and scope of the next phases of construction.
