Trump officials unveil designs for president’s controversial 250-foot arch
Source: The Washington Post
Published 1 hr ago
Published Apr 10, 2026, 1:17 PM ET
Architectural renderings of President Donald Trump's proposed triumphal arch, released by Harrison Design. (Harrison Design)
The arch is intended to commemorate the United States’ 250th anniversary. Military veterans have sued to halt the project, saying it would alter key views of Arlington National Cemetery.
The Trump administration on Friday unveiled new renderings for President Donald Trump’s planned 250-foot triumphal arch, his most significant effort to remake Washington’s skyline, as officials begin the process of seeking formal approval for the controversial project.
The renderings prepared by Harrison Design feature a golden inscription reading “One Nation Under God” on the arch, which istopped with a winged Lady Liberty statue and flanked at its base by statues of four golden lions. The project is slated for Memorial Circle, a traffic roundabout near Arlington National Cemetery, which city planners have eyed for more than a century as the site of a potential monument.
The projectis intended to commemorate the United States’ 250th anniversary. Built to Trump’s specifications, it would transform a small plot of land between the Lincoln Memorial and Arlington National Cemetery into a dominant new monument. Architects and historic preservationists have warned that the planned arch, which would be more than twice the size of the roughly 100-foot Lincoln Memorial and tower over the nearby cemetery, would distort the intent of the existing memorials and obstruct pedestrians’ views.
HANNAH DORMIDO/THE WASHINGTON POST
The renderings were filed Friday by the Interior Department with the Commission of Fine Arts, a panel of advisers on the city’s architectural matters that Trump has stocked with allies. The commission is set to review the White House’s proposal at a meeting Thursday.
Friday was the first time that the administration has formally filed plans for the arch, a project that Trump has spent months teasing on social media and in the Oval Office.
The White House and Harrison Design did not immediately respond to questions about the project, including its planned cost. Trump and the White House have previously defended the arch’s planned height, which would surpass Paris’s Arc de Triomphe — which is 164 feet high — and other memorial arches around the world.
“I’d like it to be the biggest one of all,” Trump told reporters in January. “We’re the biggest, most powerful nation.”
Under the law, certain parts of the city — including Memorial Circle — are considered protected land, and monuments built there would require congressional authorization. The circle sits narrowly inside the boundaries of Washington.
Military veterans and a historic preservationist sued the Trump administration in February, arguing that Trump’s planned arch would obstruct key views when visiting Arlington National Cemetery and interfere with the intent of nearby monuments. Public Citizen, a government watchdog organization, is seeking to halt the project until the administration secures approval from Congress and federal review panels. Democrats joined the challenge last month.
Architectural renderings of Trump's arch. (Harrison Design)
Trump was dismissive of the legal challenge this week.
“You got to be kidding,” Trump told reporters at the White House on Monday, after being informed that military veterans were suing to stop the project. “I think it’s going very good, and our veterans are the ones that should like it.”
Trump has prioritized several Washington construction projects in his second term, but the projects have faced resistance. A federal judge last month halted Trump’s plan to build a $400 million White House ballroom, saying that the administration needed approval from Congress for that project.