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Trump Raises Reflecting Pool Renovation Estimate to $20 Million Amid Ongoing Legal Dispute

Trump Raises Reflecting Pool Renovation Estimate to $20 Million Amid Ongoing Legal Dispute

WASHINGTON, D.C. — President Donald Trump announced a significant upward adjustment to his administration's budget projections for the ongoing Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool renovations, stating Thursday that the final price tag will likely land at "less than $20 million." Speaking to reporters from the Oval Office, Trump explained that the cost expansion was necessary after a personal site visit last week revealed that the historic landmark's exterior infrastructure required extensive structural remediation alongside the ongoing interior work.

The president's fiscal update comes at a highly critical moment for the project, arriving on the same day a federal judge in Washington, D.C., heard arguments from a preservationist non-profit seeking an emergency order to completely halt construction. Trump actively downplayed the budget escalation, contrasting his sub-$20 million projection with previous government repair estimates that he claimed would have cost taxpayers $350 million and taken four years to execute. The administration remains heavily focused on a strict deadline, with Trump noting the project is currently three-quarters complete and must be finalized before the national July 4th Independence Day celebrations.

"American Flag Blue" Sparks Cultural Dispute

The fast-tracked renovation has emerged as a deeply polarizing flashpoint in the nation's capital, primarily centered on the aesthetic alteration of the iconic National Mall landscape. The administration has aggressively defended the intervention, with the president repeatedly disparaging the pre-existing state of the pool as feces-infested, structurally leaking, and visually unappealing. However, historians and design experts have fiercely objected to the administration’s specific choice of a dark blue coating, officially dubbed "American Flag Blue."

The Cultural Landscape Foundation, the primary advocacy group leading the legal challenge, contends that the vibrant dark tint fundamentally distorts the civic experience of the monument. In court filings, attorneys argued that the new coloration causes the historic basin to resemble a commercial swimming pool rather than the somber, reflective aquatic mirror originally envisioned by architectural designers. Furthermore, plaintiffs allege the administration flagrantly bypassed mandatory federal statutes, including the National Historic Preservation Act and the National Environmental Policy Act, which legally require comprehensive environmental assessments and public consultation before altering historic landmarks.

Federal Court Weighs Injunction Request

During Thursday's high-stakes hearing, U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols appeared notably torn over whether to grant the preservationists' request for a temporary injunction. Nichols, a Trump appointee, aggressively questioned the plaintiffs regarding how the ongoing painting work constituted an "irreparable injury"—the strict legal threshold required for a federal court to intervene before a full trial. The judge's skepticism appeared eased after a Justice Department attorney conceded that while the applied blue paint cannot be easily scraped off the concrete, it could technically be painted over at a later date to restore the pool’s original, natural muted tones.

"Putting the pool back entirely to the way plaintiffs want — we can do that now and later," Nichols observed from the bench, indicating the court may allow construction to finish while the broader legal battle plays out. The Justice Department maintained that no environmental laws were violated, arguing the project was legally classified as "routine maintenance," which exempted it from lengthy public review processes. The case represents the latest in a series of aggressive legal challenges targeting the administration's sweeping initiatives to structurally and architecturally reshape Washington's historic core, alongside contested proposals for a massive new White House ballroom and a replica of Paris' Arc de Triomphe.

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By: CNN Newsource

May 21, 2026

Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool renovationTrump American Flag Blue paintCultural Landscape Foundation lawsuitJudge Carl Nichols injunctionfederal historic preservation review2026 Washington DC construction
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Trump Raises Reflecting Pool Renovation Estimate to $20 Million Amid Ongoing Legal Dispute