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Trump's Triumphal Arch Faces Further Review

President Donald Trump's proposal to build a 250-foot (76-meter) triumphal arch in Washington, D.C., is set for another review on Thursday as the federal agency responsible for approving construction on federal land considers the project.

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The National Capital Planning Commission (NCPC) will discuss the proposal during its meeting, with the arch among the items on its agenda.

Agency staff have recommended that commissioners grant preliminary approval for the site and building plans. However, they also advise requiring design changes before the project can receive final approval.

Planning Commission to Consider Revised Design

According to a 185-page staff report, the proposed design should be revised to comply with the federal Height of Buildings Act, which limits building heights in downtown Washington to protect the city's skyline.

The report recommends that the commission ask the applicant to revise the design and return for final approval. It says the required changes would involve redistributing the height of the main structure, the habitable roof section and the three gilded statues planned for the top of the arch.

Height Rules and Design Changes

Despite those revisions, the overall structure, including the public observation deck and statues, would still reach Trump's proposed height of 250 feet, the report said.

Staff also recommended that commissioners seek additional information on vehicle traffic around the site, the proposed granite exterior and other aspects of the project before the Interior Department, which oversees the National Park Service, submits the proposal for final approval.

Trump plans to build the monument on a traffic circle at the Virginia end of Memorial Bridge, opposite the District of Columbia.

Opposition and Legal Challenge

The proposal has already received approval from the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts, which signed off on the design in May. The NCPC began its review in June.

Critics argue the arch would dominate Washington's skyline and disrupt the historic sightline between the Lincoln Memorial and Arlington National Cemetery, a view designed to symbolize national reunification after the Civil War.

However, opposition has had little impact on the two federal commissions reviewing the project. Both include members closely aligned with Trump, who appointed senior White House aide Will Scharf to chair the planning commission.

A group of veterans and a historian have filed a federal lawsuit seeking to block construction, arguing the project would damage the historic vista.

Funding Questions Remain

The proposed arch would stand more than twice the height of the 99-foot (30-meter) Lincoln Memorial and nearly half the height of the 555-foot (169-meter) Washington Monument.

Trump previously said the project could be financed using unused funds from hundreds of millions of dollars he said had been raised from corporate and private donors for a new $400 million White House ballroom.

However, public funds are now expected to contribute to both the ballroom and the arch project. The White House has not released an estimated cost for the monument.

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9 July 2026

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