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White House Columns Covered by Giant Printed Tarps as $1.2 Billion Trump Construction Blitz Goes Deeper Into America’s Most Historic House

White House Columns Covered by Giant Printed Tarps as $1.2 Billion Trump Construction Blitz Goes Deeper Into America's Most Historic House

White House Columns Covered by Giant Printed Tarps as $1.2 Billion Trump Construction Blitz Goes Deeper Into America's Most Historic House

Published by TrenBuzz.com | July 9, 2026 | LATEST NEWS


Key Points at a Glance – White House Columns


White House Columns Renovation: What Is Actually Being Done Behind the Tarps

The White House North Portico is covered with significant scaffolding, now covered by a drape, as workers rehabilitate the exterior columns at President Donald Trump’s request. Trump spent roughly six minutes inspecting the columns as his motorcade returned from Arlington National Cemetery on Memorial Day.

Interior Secretary Doug Burgum described seeing Trump react to the columns in real time. “You know, President Trump comes out to greet a world leader, he sees door dings and the pillars and says, ‘Look at all this stuff, it needs to be repaired.'”

That six-minute inspection on Memorial Day launched a project whose full scope and cost remain undisclosed to the American public.


The Corinthian Column Theory and Why the Internet Is Paying Attention

The timing attracted particular attention because it comes less than 24 hours after Trump’s Truth Social post highlighting Corinthian columns, a design style previously championed by Cook as a possible replacement for the White House’s existing columns.

The original columns are Ionic, a classical style used since the White House was built in 1792. Corinthian columns are more elaborate and ornate, associated with imperial grandeur rather than republican simplicity.

Whether the tarps are hiding a restoration or something more fundamental, only the contractors currently have the answer.


The Bigger Pattern: $1.2 Billion and Counting Across Washington

The column project is the latest in a blitz that includes the East Wing ballroom, a new South Lawn helipad rushed at $13 million to prepare for an unnamed state visitor, the botched Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool restoration that refilled with algae, and the ongoing Kennedy Center fights.

Construction crews also began work on a previously unannounced helipad on the White House’s South Lawn last week. Contractor records show the White House sped up construction on the $13 million project and added $875,000 to the bill in anticipation of an “upcoming state visit.”

Every one of these projects shares the same pattern: announced after the fact, priced without transparency, and finished on Trump’s personal timeline rather than any public procurement schedule.


🔗 [Also Read: “Trump Administration Reflecting Pool Repairs: Algae, $16 Million, and the Same Contractor Twice” | TrenBuzz.com]

🔗 [“Courts, Congress and a Ballroom: The White House East Wing Litigation That Will Not Go Away” | TrenBuzz.com]

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