Ballroom Derangement Syndrome Now Besets the Pathetic Left

Every time trump lies in your face you thank him by swallowing....

....it.

That's a new building, not the historic, publicly owned seat of our government, stupid hillbilly.

And it's not even completed yet, so of course it looks bad now.

When it's finished it will look like this.....

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....stupid hillbilly.
That's really not what it's going to look like , right?
 
Trump said he would not touch the existing building 2 months ago. He said it was a building he loved and was the biggest fan of. Yeah, he talks like that. Then he tore it down without consulting the agencies that oversee historical construction. The National Planning Commission was ignored. The Commission of Fine Arts, not consulted.
In the East Wing were the First Lady's Office, A Military Office, the Graphics Office, the Office of Legislative Affairs, and others. It went from Trump loving the building to his unilateral decision to bulldoze it. Now he calls it an ugly old building.
Trump steps over so many lines. That taints so much of what he does. He also lies all along the way. he is repulsive. Now The Grand Gold Trump Ballroom and Souvenir Shop is being built exactly how he decides.
Are you Trumpys so crazy that you cannot understand how many things are wrong in this mess?
 
Poor Walter, AKA WWW (Wrong Way Walter) is “terrorized” by all this.

Hot chocolate and tissues, perhaps.

Does anyone know the proposed completion date?

A nice trip to safe DC (thanks to President Trump and the National Guard) would be nice to see the beautiful new ballroom, at no expense to the taxpayers) thanks to President Trump and some business sponsors.
 
Looks like a cafeteria. Inappropriate for state functions
The UN does it worse...

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Poor Walter, AKA WWW (Wrong Way Walter) is “terrorized” by all this.

Hot chocolate and tissues, perhaps.

Does anyone know the proposed completion date?

A nice trip to safe DC (thanks to President Trump and the National Guard) would be nice to see the beautiful new ballroom, at no expense to the taxpayers) thanks to President Trump and some business sponsors.
Trump is going to have it finished before he leaves the White House in 2032.
 
A privately funded GIFT to the American People, which will allow us to treat Presidential guests with common dignity, instead of outside, in the weather forced to use Port-a Pots, etc....

This, of course, has driven the perpetual-burr-up-the-ass left into a foamy-mouthed frenzy...."Ballroom Derangement Syndrome".

Meanwhile, here is a list of previous White House renovations:


Major White House renovations include the 1902 addition of the West Wing, the 1948-1952 structural reconstruction under Truman for $5.7 million (approx. $70–$85 million today), and the 1934-1942 construction of the East Wing. Other notable changes include Theodore Roosevelt adding the West Wing in 1902, William Howard Taft adding the first Oval Office in 1909, and recent projects like the 2025 Rose Garden and East Wing renovations.

Major renovations and costs...starting with Obama: (who spent $376 million taxpayer dollars)




2025 to 2029: Construction of a new ‘State Ballroom’ addition to the East Wing under President Donald Trump

Scope: To put a 90,000-square-foot ballroom in perspective, the original White House footprint was about 8,000 square feet; the current Executive Residence covers about 55,000 square feet; and together, the East and West Wings measure about 12,000 square feet.

Cost: An estimated $300 million in private donations, according to Trump.


2007: Press briefing room renovation under President George W. Bush

Scope: The James S. Brady Press Briefing Room covers roughly 2,200 square feet and is surrounded by small offices for the White House press corps. Bush modernized the whole area.

Cost: $8.5 million at the time (or $14 million to $18 million, adjusted for inflation). Of that total, $2.5 million came from the media itself; the remainder came from tax revenue.


1975: Construction of an outdoor swimming pool on the South Lawn under President Gerald Ford

Scope: Ford built a roughly 1,200-square-foot outdoor pool to replace the indoor pool that his predecessor, Richard Nixon, had covered and converted to the press briefing room five years earlier.

Cost: $66,800 in private donations (or $404,000, adjusted for inflation)


1948 to 1952: Full structural reconstruction of the White House under President Harry Truman

Scope: Truman’s "total reconstruction" of the White House preserved its exterior walls while rebuilding its foundation, adding steel and concrete to its structure and upgrading its systems. In the process, Truman added six rooms and two new sub-basements, bringing the total square footage close to where it

Cost: $5.7 million (or $70 million to $85 million, adjusted for inflation)


1934 and 1942: Overhaul of the West Wing and construction of the current East Wing under President Franklin D. Roosevelt

Scope: In 1934, Roosevelt added a second floor and a larger basement to the West Wing while relocating the Oval Office to its current location; in 1942, he built the current two-story East Wing office building (primarily to cover the construction of an underground bunker). Today these two nonresidential wings of the White House measure in at 12,000 square feet.

Cost: Unspecified, but substantial


1929 and 1930: Renovation and reconstruction of the West Wing under President Herbert Hoover

Scope: In 1929, Hoover spent seven months remodeling the West Wing, excavating a partial basement and supporting it with structural steel. But on Christmas Eve of that year, a four-alarm fire significantly damaged his newly completed project. Hoover was forced to rebuild the West Wing the following year.
Cost: Unspecified


1927: Renovation of upper floors and attic of the White House under President Calvin Coolidge

Scope: Coolidge replaced the White House’s original wood trusses with steel while rebuilding the roof and adding third-floor living spaces and offices for servants and secretaries.

Cost: $185,000 (or $3.5 million, adjusted for inflation)


1909: Expansion of the West Wing and creation of the Oval Office under President William Howard Taft

Scope: Taft expanded the existing, temporary building southward, covering the tennis court, and placed the first Oval Office at the center of the addition's south facade.

Cost: Unspecified


1902: Major renovation and expansion beyond the White House residence under President Theodore Roosevelt

Scope: First lady Edith Roosevelt hired the architects McKim, Mead & White to separate the White House’s living quarters from its offices, creating a temporary West Wing on a site previously occupied by stables and greenhouses along with an “East Wing” entrance for formal and public visitors. The Roosevelts also enlarged and modernized the White House’s public rooms, redid its landscaping and redecorated its interior.
Cost: Congress appropriated $475,445 for the project (or $18 million to $22 million, adjusted for inflation)


1881: Redecoration under President Chester A. Arthur

Scope: Among other changes, Arthur cleared rooms, sold off furniture and commissioned Tiffany lighting.

Cost: $110,00 (or $3.5 million to $4.5 million, adjusted for inflation)


1824 and 1829: Additions of South and North Porticos under Presidents James Monroe and Andrew Jackson

Scope: The White House’s iconic colonnaded porticos were added by original architect James Hoban within a five-year period in the early 1800s.

Cost: About $19,000 for the elliptical South Portico and about $25,000 for the rectangular North Portico (or a little more than $1 million combined and adjusted for inflation).


1815 to 1817: Rebuilding of the White House under Presidents James Madison and James Monroe after burning by British troops in the War of 1812

Scope: Presidents Madison and Monroe oversaw a multi-year reconstruction of the original 8,000-square-foot White House after its interior was destroyed by the British during the Burning of Washington. Only the exterior walls remained, but they were weakened by fire and the elements and had to be mostly rebuilt as well (except for portions of the south wall).
Cost: Approximately $500,000 (or $11.5 million to $13 million, adjusted for inflation)


1792 to 1800: Original construction of the White House Executive Residence

Scope: The original 8,000-square-foot, Hoban-designed White House took eight years to build after the cornerstone was laid on Oct. 13, 1792. Many of the workmen were European immigrants who had not yet attained citizenship; enslaved African Americans quarried the stone used in construction.

Cost: $232,371 (or $5.9 million to $7.5 million, adjusted for inflation)





COMING SOON TO THE WHITE HOUSE​

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All the renderings are posted on the white house website... Actually quite beautiful... Long overdue... Something Jackie O dreamt of.. She's most certainly smiling....
The renderings that make no sense? That has a staircase leading nowhere? That the interior doesn't match the exterior? The interior shows 5 windows facing west and the exterior facing east shows 6 windows.

Not only that, the WH website lists the cost at $200 million. I wonder what that other $100 million is for.
 
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