Work continues on the development of the ballroom on the White Home, Thursday, April 9, 2026, in Washington, the place the East Wing as soon as stood.
Rod Lamkey/AP
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Rod Lamkey/AP
Development on a proposed White Home ballroom can proceed till April 17, the U.S. Court docket of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit dominated Saturday, whereas the Trump administration challenges a decrease courtroom ruling that ordered a cease to building as a result of the challenge lacked congressional approval.

President Trump has been battling a lawsuit introduced by the Nationwide Belief for Historic Preservation in December to stop the East Wing ballroom plan from going ahead.
A 3-judge panel dominated 2-1 that the president’s plan for an enormous neoclassical ballroom can transfer ahead briefly because the decrease courtroom additional opinions the case. Saturday’s resolution offers the administration time to have the Supreme Court docket weigh in on the way forward for the location.
The appeals courtroom resolution stays a March ruling by U.S. District Court docket Decide Richard Leon, a George W. Bush appointee, who had ordered that the development should cease by April 14, “till Congress authorizes its completion.”
The administration started demolishing the East Wing in October to make room for the brand new ballroom, which is anticipated to seat 1,000 friends and value no less than $300 million. Trump has defended the continued building, saying the house is critical to host massive occasions. Final month, the president argued that halting the ballroom building would pose nationwide safety dangers, alluding to the existence of a safe bunker beneath the ballroom.
Trump advised reporters on March 29 about his administration’s plans to improve the FDR-era bunker: “The navy is constructing a giant complicated beneath the ballroom.” He added that the ballroom “primarily turns into a shed for what’s being constructed beneath,” including that the “high-grade bulletproof glass” home windows would shield the power under “from drones and … from another factor.”
Development of the ballroom was permitted in February by the Fee of Fantastic Arts, a federal company with evaluate authority over building in D.C., and made up by a majority of Trump appointees.
In response to Saturday’s ruling, Carol Quillen, president and CEO of The Nationwide Belief for Historic Preservation, expressed no issues that building would proceed for 3 additional days. In a press release, the nonprofit mentioned it appreciated the courtroom’s swift motion and would await additional clarification from the district courtroom.
“The Nationwide Belief stays dedicated to honoring the historic significance of the White Home, advocating for our collective position as stewards, and demonstrating how broad session, together with with the American folks, ends in a greater total consequence,” Quillen mentioned in a press release.
Trump administration attorneys didn’t reply to NPR’s request for remark.
NPR’s Chloe Veltman contributed to this report.

