Trump’s wrecking crew starts East Wing demolition for White House ballroom: ‘More damage than the British did in 1814’

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Workers began ripping into the White House facade on Monday



The White House has started tearing down parts of the East Wing to make way for construction of President Donald Trump’s planned $250 million ballroom.

Demolition crews on Monday began work on ripping up the facade of the East Wing facing the Treasury Department, a part of the building which housed the White House’s calligraphy office and the entrance that has long been used by visitors arriving for special events or tours.

Trump confirmed the demolition work during an event with the NCAA and NAIA baseball championship teams from Louisiana State University and its’ Shreveport, Louisiana satellite campus.

He said the new ballroom would be “a lot of fun” and noted that the construction had “started today.”

“You know, we're building right behind us. We're building a ballroom. They've wanted a ballroom for 150 years, and I'm giving that honor to this wonderful place,” he said.

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A model of the ballroom is depicted on the left side of this scale model of the White House complex


The president appeared to suggest that the new ballroom would be connected to the main White House residence through what he described as a “knockout panel” in the East Room.


The East Wing, which was built in 1902 and given a second floor under then-president Franklin Roosevelt in 1942, has traditionally housed the Office of the First Lady and other parts of the White House, including the White House Travel Office and the White House Military Office.

It also sits atop the Presidential Emergency Operations Center, the Second World War-era bomb shelter constructed for Roosevelt that was famously used by then-vice president Dick Cheney during the September 11, 2001 terror attacks on New York and Washington.

The demolition of the decades-old structure, which is the newest building on the 18-acre White House complex, appears to violate President Trump’s pledge that the massive new event space he has commissioned would not “interfere” with the existing buildings.


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The ballroom will hold 650 seated people, a big increase from the current 200-person seated capacity of the East Room

But White House officials have also suggested separately that the new ballroom would replace the East Wing and have justified the move by noting that it has been “has been renovated and changed many times,” including the 1942 renovation that added the second floor and the bomb shelter to the building.

Last week, the president told donors at a fundraising dinner for the ballroom that the project had been fully financed, including with donations from a slew of companies including Apple, Amazon, Lockheed Martin and Coinbase.

He has said the new ballroom will seat as many as 650 people — more than three times the capacity of the East Room.

News of the demolition work was met with scorn from some liberal commentators.

One such pundit, legal writer Marcy Wheeler, compared the destruction of the East Wing facade to the damage done by British troops under command of Major General Robert Ross, who ordered the burning of both the White House residence and the Capitol during the War of 1812.

“First Trump's mob attacked the Capitol for the first time since 1812. And now Trump is doing more damage to the White House than the British did in 1814,” she said.



Former CNN anchor Jim Acosta also weighed in, writing: “So any president can just start destroying portions of the White House? Is that how this works? “



While new construction of federal buildings must be vetted by the National Capital Planning Commission board, the Trump-appointed head of that panel said in September that the demolition work falls outside the board’s jurisdiction and can proceed without the need for approval.

Will Scharf, who also serves as the White House Staff Secretary, said during a NCPC meeting last month that the board lacks authority over demolition or site preparation efforts.

“What we deal with is essentially construction, vertical build,” he said.


 
he loves fuckin up some shit
He's doing it for ego.....so he'll always be associated with the white house and presidency

Shits ridiculous. How many people got laid off to pay for that?
He claimed earlier that he would do no damage to the existing structure, yet he tears down the wall leading into it. Notice that the ball room is bigger than the white house itself and has double the area ...it looks like a gaudy 16th century french ballroom in Versailles or a "Saddam Hussein" room in Iraq. :smh: :hmm:



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Trump: "It won't interfere with the current building, it will be near it but won't touch it, and pays total respect to the existing building, which I'm the biggest fan of, it's my favorite place. I love it."

Didn't that fat sack of shit call the white house a fucking dump during his first administration? ... :hmm:


President Trump calls the White House "a real dump."​

According to reports, President Trump calls the White House "a real dump."




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He's doing it for ego.....so he'll always be associated with the white house and presidency

Shits ridiculous. How many people got laid off to pay for that?


  • At least 700,000+ federal employees have been furloughed, with nearly as many continuing to work without pay.
  • 3 million active-duty personnel and over 750,000 National Guard and reserve personnel are also required to serve, potentially without pay.

You think ballrooms are cheap ?
 
  • At least 700,000+ federal employees have been furloughed, with nearly as many continuing to work without pay.
  • 3 million active-duty personnel and over 750,000 National Guard and reserve personnel are also required to serve, potentially without pay.

You think ballrooms are cheap ?
He claims that outside soures are paying the $200M cost..... it's being reported that facebook, amazon, apple etc. are the main donors..... you know the ones he blackmailed into donating to him.... he's got them all bent over a sawhorse like Ving Rhames in Pulp fiction.... only they are all yelling deeper as he plows them out



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Trump Goons Rage at Backlash to White House Demolition Job​


The White House has fired back at criticism over the demolition of a section of the historic building to make way for Donald Trump’s beloved $250 million ballroom.

Photos on Monday showed construction equipment ripping down the entrance of the East Wing of the White House, an area that has long housed the offices of the first lady.

On Monday, the president talked up his 90,000-square foot ballroom, which, with a capacity of 999 people, will be covered by bulletproof glass.

“They’ve wanted a ballroom for 150 years,” Trump said during an event celebrating baseball champions Louisiana State University and Louisiana State University-Shreveport in the East Room at the White House. “And I’m giving that honor to this wonderful place. You’re gonna see a ballroom the likes of which... I don’t think it’ll be topped.”

Trump then added on Truth Social that the “ground has been broken” on the “much-needed project.”

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A general view of the ongoing construction works on the White House grounds in Washington, D.C., United States, on October 20, 2025.

The demolition, however, has raised eyebrows among Trump critics. Key Democratic figures called out the optics of starting construction on the luxury private ballroom during a cost-of-living crisis.

Gov. Gavin Newsom of California shared an image of bulldozers tearing down the East Wing. “Ripping apart the White House just like he’s ripping apart the Constitution,” he wrote.

The Democrats posted a construction photo on X, claiming, “Trump is tearing down the East Wing of the White House to build a $250 million golden ballroom for himself and his donors.”

Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren also joined the chorus of criticism, as well as JFK’s niece, Maria Shriver, who said the images of the demolition “breaks my heart” and “infuriates me.”



It didn’t take MAGA mouthpieces long to weigh in on the demolition debate.

The White House’s official RapidResponse47 X account called out the “FAKE OUTRAGE” over Trump’s “big, beautiful (and privately funded) White House Ballroom” by listing previous tweaks to the building, including President Barack Obama upgrading the tennis court into a full basketball court in 2009.
White House Director of Communications Steven Cheung was among the most vocal on X, digging up a photo of a 1950 White House renovation from a Smithsonian story highlighting construction over the years at the iconic building.

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White House Communications Director Steven Cheung is seen during a US-Russia summit on Ukraine at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage, Alaska, on August 15, 2025.

“Construction has always been a part of the evolution of the White House,” Cheung wrote. “Losers who are quick to criticize need to stop their pearl clutching and understand the building needs to be modernized. Otherwise you’re just living in the past.”

He also shared a renovation pic with a render of the inside of the future ballroom, noting that it was, “The beginning of something beautiful.”



White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt also reposted vintage renovation images of the West Wing under construction in 1934 and the interior of the White House during the Truman renovation between 1948-1952, adding “And President Trump is not costing the taxpayers a dime!”
The White House’s X account also shared sketches of the ballroom design, noting it was privately funded, and “it costs taxpayers nothing & will be cherished for generations.”

The Daily Beast has reached out to the White House for additional comment.

Announcing the construction in July, the White House said in a statement, “The East Wing was constructed in 1902 and has been renovated and changed many times, with a second story added in 1942.”
Trump funded the estimated $250 million cost of the ballroom from cashed-up donors, holding an exclusive dinner last week at the White House to thank his “really, really generous” friends in the room.

“A couple of you sitting here [were] saying, ‘Uh, sir, would $25 million be appropriate?’,” Trump noted. “I said, ‘I’ll take it.’ You know, it doesn’t take too many 25[million]s to get it done.”

Trump had earlier promised that his renovations would not impact on the current building. “It won’t interfere with the current building. It won’t be. It’ll be near it but not touching it–and pays total respect to the existing building, which I’m the biggest fan of,” Trump said in July. “It’s my favorite. It’s my favorite place. I love it.”
Other Democrats called out the construction on social media. Sen. Andy Kim of New Jersey posted a photo of his family posing in front of the area of the White House that has now been demolished. “We didn’t need a billionaire-funded ballroom to celebrate America,” Kim posted on X. “Disgusting what Trump is doing.”

Sen. Tina Smith of Minnesota posted on X, “Seeing the White House torn apart is really emblematic of the times we’re in.”
Illinois congressman Sean Casten said a photo of the demolition was, “The Trump administration, in one image.”



CNN political commentator Karen Finney said the timing of the construction was “fairly grotesque” at a time when the government is shut down and inflation is still high.

Speaking on CNN’s The Source with Kaitlan Collins on Monday, Finney said she was shocked at the pictures of the East Wing being demolished.

“Having worked in the White House there’s so much beauty and history in the East Wing,” Finney said. “It’s so sad to see that huge hole there... In many ways what the People’s House is supposed to be about is not necessarily a grand ballroom with crystal chandeliers, so I just think the construction timing is really gross.”

However CNN’s conservative commentator Scott Jennings praised the changes.

“Donald Trump is all about hospitality, that’s his business,” Jennings said. “This is going to give us a place in the White House to do the biggest and best hospitality we’ve ever done.”



 
I find a tan suit more offensive.

But seriously do you think the report the bones of slaves found when the begin excavation of the grounds?
 
I find a tan suit more offensive.

But seriously do you think the report the bones of slaves found when the begin excavation of the grounds?
If they found it they will bury it deeper or they will do their own research saying the Democrats was in office when this happened... TRUMP 2037!!!!!!!!!

:hmm:
The only thing that's even remotely positive about the demolition is the fact that black slaves aren't building it now.... shit looks like the side of the pentagon on 9/11 when the plane hit .... just no fire and smoke... :hmm:

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All I know is the dumbasses that voted for him did because the economy was terrible, migrants were taking their jobs, robbing and stealing, the government was spending too much money, etc.

When are we gonna get a kick back from all this saving they are doing?

Is the fact that the migrants are almost gone the reason we are seeing white people charged with molesting kids and mass killings?
 
First he said that the new building would be near the whitehouse but not touch it
Then he said only a doorway would be removed, after removing it
Then the whole wall bordering it was removed
Then the WHOLE east wing was leveled
He said the new building would cost $200M
Then he said it would cost $230M
Now he says that it will cost $300M
The plan new building is now bigger than the whitehouse itself



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Tech, crypto, tobacco, other companies fund Trump’s White House ballroom​

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The facade of the East Wing of the White House is demolished by work crews Oct. 21, 2025. The demolition is part of President Donald Trump's plan to build a ballroom reportedly costing $250 million on the eastern side of the White House.

Dozens of companies and individual billionaires are lining up to pay for President Donald Trump’s 90,000-square-foot White House ballroom, the administration revealed Thursday.

The donors include tech giants whose leaders have dined with Trump during his second administration, including Amazon, Apple, Google and Meta Platforms. Also heavily represented on the list were key players in the crypto industry, including Coinbase, Ripple, Tether and the influential Winklevoss twins, who have emerged as fierce allies of the president in recent months. Rounding out the list are tobacco companies Altria Group and Reynolds American, an oil magnate, and others who are subject to government regulations.
Among the Cabinet, donors include billionaire Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, listed as “The Lutnick Family.” Small Business Administrator Kelly Loeffler and her husband, Wall Street billionaire Jeff Sprecher, donated. Also on the list is Benjamin Leon Jr., who Trump has nominated to serve as ambassador to Spain.

It’s not known the amount each donor is contributing.

Trump has said that his latest construction project, set to hold 999 people, won’t use taxpayer money. His latest estimates put the project at $300 million, up from a previous estimation of $200 million weeks before.

Trump has long argued the White House needs more square footage to hold guests for formal ceremonies. For large events, administrations led by both parties either crammed everyone in the East Room, which holds a capacity of 200, or set up tents on the South Lawn.

Construction crews began demolishing the East Wing this week to make room for the new ballroom, which the White House has said will be completed “long” before Trump leaves office in 2029.

The plans show the ballroom as having tall windows, white walls and grand arches, similar to Trump’s usual style.
Several billionaires included on the list dined with the president at the White House last week. They include Blackstone CEO Stephen Schwarzman, oil magnate Harold Hamm, Israeli-American investor Isaac Perlmutter, private equity investor Konstantin Sokolov and Edward Glazer, who owns the British soccer team Manchester United.

The list also includes Stefan Brodie, a biotech entrepreneur who along with his brother was convicted of violating American sanctions on Cuba in 2002. Former President Joe Biden denied both Brodie’s and his brother’s request for a pardon in 2023.

Several of the donors stand to benefit directly from currying favor with the Trump administration. Cuban-American sugar baron José Fanjul and his wife, Emilia Fanjul, for example, reportedly helped sway Trump to push Coca-Cola to use cane sugar in its signature soda beverage.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt declined to say how much money Trump has personally committed to the project at a Thursday press briefing, but said the administration would share a dollar figure at an unspecified later point.

She also clarified that renovations to the Presidential Emergency Operations Center below the East Wing would also be funded privately and that the Office of the First Lady would continue to be housed in the East Wing following the renovation.

“This is going to be a magnificent addition to the White House for many years to come, and it’s not costing the taxpayers anything,” Leavitt said.

The full donor list is as follows:

Altria Group Inc.
Amazon
Apple
Booz Allen Hamilton Inc.
Caterpillar Inc.
Coinbase
Comcast Corporation
J. Pepe and Emilia Fanjul
Hard Rock International
Google
HP Inc.
Lockheed Martin
Meta Platforms
Micron Technology
Microsoft
NextEra Energy Inc.
Palantir Technologies Inc.
Ripple
Reynolds American
T-Mobile
Tether America
Union Pacific Railroad
Adelson Family Foundation
Stefan E. Brodie
Betty Wold Johnson Foundation
Charles and Marissa Cascarilla
Edward and Shari Glazer
Harold Hamm
Benjamin Leon Jr.
The Lutnick Family
The Laura & Isaac Perlmutter Foundation
Stephen A. Schwarzman
Konstantin Sokolov
Kelly Loeffler and Jeff Sprecher
Paolo Tiramani
Cameron Winklevoss
Tyler Winklevoss

 
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Trump donors may get their names etched into White House walls 'forever'​


Donors to President Donald Trump's lavish new White House ballroom may get their names enshrined in the building "forever," according to a new report.

Trump is building a new ballroom, a project described as the most significant renovation of the White House since Harry Truman. The ballroom is planned as part of a 90,000-square-foot expansion of the East Wing. The ballroom itself will cover about 25,000 square feet and seat up to 900 guests.

Notably, the estimated cost is around $200 million — and is funded privately by Trump and donors. And a new report reveals special incentives are under consideration for wealthy elites willing to pony up to fund the project. That includes having their names "etched inside the White House forever," according to CBS News.
Another possibility: having donor names placed on a website. A final decision has not been made, according to the report.

Sources familiar with the matter told the outlet that multiple firms have promised to donate at least $5 million to the project, with Trump personally talking to business executives about doing so.

The companies that have contributed include some of the biggest names in tech and defense: Google, Lockheed Martin and Palantir, sources told CBS News. Blackstone Group CEO Stephen Schwarzman has also pledged money.

Trump previously said he'd cover the costs.

"I'm paying for it. I'm paying for it," Trump said.


 
You think he is doing the reno for someone else to live there? :lol:
He and the Republicac party will find a way for him to have a third term.... you remember when he said he could kill someone in the middle of 5th Ave and still get elected? He's already testing killing mofos right now and he likes the taste of blood, being able to kill at will... he's loving it..... blowing mofos up in the ocean without any proof of drugs and getting away with it


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BALLROOM THY NAME IS TRUMP?

Donald Trump Chooses Name for New Ballroom:​

President Donald Trump is likely to name the new $300 million White House ballroom after himself, senior administration officials told ABC News.

White House spokesperson Davis Ingle said in an email to Newsweek, “Any announcement made on the name of the ballroom will come directly from President Trump himself, and not through anonymous and unnamed sources."

Officials have reportedly already begun referring to the project as “The President Donald J. Trump Ballroom,” according to ABC News. Trump has not publicly confirmed what he plans to call the ballroom.

AP25295778398910.jpg

President Donald Trump holds up a table seating chart of the new White House ballroom during a meeting in the Oval Office on October 22, 2025

Why It Matters​

This week, construction crews began tearing down the entire East Wing of the White House to make way for the ballroom, sparking backlash from critics who say it is an unnecessary "vanity project," with the name likely to further fuel their discontent.

The National Trust for Historic Preservation has urged the Trump administration to pause the demolition until a planning commission review is completed, expressing concern that the 90,000-square-foot ballroom "will overwhelm the White House itself." The White House is 55,000 square feet.

Trump has argued the White House needs a large entertaining space, criticizing the past practice of presidents hosting state dinners and other large events in tents on the South Lawn.

What To Know​

Trump has not publicly announced the name of the new ballroom and, on Thursday, told ABC News, "I won't get into that now."

The demolition of the structure, which was first built in 1902 and then expanded in 1942, has proven controversial among some Americans, including historians. In a Friday X post, The White House posted archival photos of previous White House renovations, with the caption: "Hi, haters."

Trump said the East Wing was “ready to be replaced” and argued that adding a “new, big, beautiful White House Ballroom” would make the complex “more beautiful than ever when it is complete.”

Trump has used his name as a branding tool for ventures, including hotels and golf courses.


CONTINUED:
 

Of Kings and Palaces​

Why Democrats should commit—right now—to restoring the old East Wing of the White House.​


We’re doing this again; I’m sorry in advance. But I refuse to let this be a one-day story. It’s important.

https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F8c8f6d8c-1349-40df-b069-62430ce7b688_3987x2770.jpeg
The façade of the East Wing of the White House, still being demolished on October 23, 2025.

1. Once More, With Feeling​

Yesterday Jon Favreau and Tim clowned on me for caring so much about the demolition of the East Wing of the White House. So let me make one more run at explaining why this superficial-seeming subject is so important.

What is the limiting principle on Trump’s destruction of the East Wing?

There are only two possible energy states here:

(1) The White House is a national landmark and the property of the American people. Presidents are tenants. They may make cosmetic alterations, but nothing more. Larger alterations must be acts of government, undertaken only after due consideration, with inputs from the various stakeholders,1 and the express consent of the governed as demonstrated by lawfully appropriated funding to execute any such projects.

(2) The president is not a tenant, but a lord. He owns the White House and can do whatever he wants to it. No questions asked.

That’s it. There are no other options.

This week’s demolition of the East Wing makes clear that we are living in the second scenario. There are no limiting principles for this state of affairs. So answer me this:

If Trump decided to bulldoze the entire White House complex, pave it over, and move the seat of executive power permanently to Camp David, or Mar-a-Lago, or Moscow, could he do that?

I know what you’re thinking. JVL, that’s absurd. He couldn’t do that.

Well please explain to me: Why not?


 
WELPS....... :hmm:

Some White House ballroom contractors go underground​

"The site is under construction" is a sign that could greet visitors peering through the fence at the southeast corner of the White House, trying to catch a glimpse of where the East Wing once stood.

Instead, those are the words greeting visitors to the websites of several companies working on building the White House ballroom.

aceco.png
ACECO is a Maryland-based demolition company.

Some of these firms appear to be trying to lower their profiles (in some cases, literally, on social media) amid the sometimes vitriolic online reaction to the East Wing demolition and construction of the 90,000-square-foot, privately financed ballroom. None of the firms have been accused of any legal wrongdoing.

EAI Rolloff, a Maryland-based hauling company, has advised visitors to its homepage that the site is "Undergoing Routine Maintenance." There are no links or contact information listed.
eai-rolloff.png
Homepage for EAI Rolloff, a Maryland-based hauling company

It's not clear when the site was taken offline or why, but an archived version from earlier this year gives customers options to learn about the company's services, contact the firm or read about its history.

"We are honest, ethical, responsive, professional and diligent," the company's archived "core values" page said.

Late last week, a red and charcoal gray truck bearing the EAI logo and phone number delivered discarded rebar from the White House to a scrap yard just outside Washington. The company did not respond to emails and a phone call seeking comment.

Photographers last week captured heavy equipment leveling the East Wing and corridor connecting it to the White House residence. Emblazoned in black, white and red on an excavator arm was ACECO, a Maryland-based demolition company.

ACECO's website is also unavailable. "This Site Is Under Construction," it says in bold block lettering. As recently as August, according to the Internet Archive, ACECO's site showed off the firm's work at the University of Maryland and heralded its clients, which included Clark Construction, the construction contractor hired to build the White House ballroom.

Social media profiles for the company and its leadership are no longer active. WTOP reported that ratings website Yelp "temporarily disabled the posting of content to the page for ACECO" because of hostility directed at the company.

One Yelp poster wrote, "How do you sleep at night when all of America hates you?"

Representatives for ACECO — perhaps unsurprisingly — did not respond to a request for comment.

When President Trump announced the project this summer, he named McCrery Architects as the lead design firm. As recently as April, McCrery's site was robust, displaying the firm's prior design projects, its approach to architecture and staff biographies, according to an archived version of the page maintained by the Internet Archive.

mccrery-april-2025.png

McCrery Architects homepage, April 2025

Now, McCrery's website is limited to a single page with a rotating photo, generic email address and phone number. Renderings of the White House ballroom are included in the photo carousel.

mccrery-oct-2025.png

McCrery Architects homepage, October 2025

When CBS News called the number listed on the firm's website, the phone rang several times before a recorded message said the voicemail was full. A McCrery spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment.

Not all companies have shunned attention brought on by their association with the ballroom.

Websites for Clark Construction and AECOM, the lead engineering firm, appear to be intact. Both are large companies — Clark has a national footprint and AECOM is a multinational company valued at $17 billion and publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange.

The smaller businesses that have pulled down their websites are headquartered in the Washington, D.C., area.

Carrier, another multibillion-dollar, publicly traded company, was not shy about its involvement in the ballroom. A company spokesperson proclaimed that Carrier was "honored to provide the new iconic ballroom at the White House with a world-class, energy-efficient HVAC system."


 
Trump has to be the most toxic person to ever live.
WELPS....... :hmm:

Some White House ballroom contractors go underground​

"The site is under construction" is a sign that could greet visitors peering through the fence at the southeast corner of the White House, trying to catch a glimpse of where the East Wing once stood.

Instead, those are the words greeting visitors to the websites of several companies working on building the White House ballroom.

aceco.png
ACECO is a Maryland-based demolition company.

Some of these firms appear to be trying to lower their profiles (in some cases, literally, on social media) amid the sometimes vitriolic online reaction to the East Wing demolition and construction of the 90,000-square-foot, privately financed ballroom. None of the firms have been accused of any legal wrongdoing.

EAI Rolloff, a Maryland-based hauling company, has advised visitors to its homepage that the site is "Undergoing Routine Maintenance." There are no links or contact information listed.
eai-rolloff.png
Homepage for EAI Rolloff, a Maryland-based hauling company

It's not clear when the site was taken offline or why, but an archived version from earlier this year gives customers options to learn about the company's services, contact the firm or read about its history.

"We are honest, ethical, responsive, professional and diligent," the company's archived "core values" page said.

Late last week, a red and charcoal gray truck bearing the EAI logo and phone number delivered discarded rebar from the White House to a scrap yard just outside Washington. The company did not respond to emails and a phone call seeking comment.

Photographers last week captured heavy equipment leveling the East Wing and corridor connecting it to the White House residence. Emblazoned in black, white and red on an excavator arm was ACECO, a Maryland-based demolition company.

ACECO's website is also unavailable. "This Site Is Under Construction," it says in bold block lettering. As recently as August, according to the Internet Archive, ACECO's site showed off the firm's work at the University of Maryland and heralded its clients, which included Clark Construction, the construction contractor hired to build the White House ballroom.

Social media profiles for the company and its leadership are no longer active. WTOP reported that ratings website Yelp "temporarily disabled the posting of content to the page for ACECO" because of hostility directed at the company.

One Yelp poster wrote, "How do you sleep at night when all of America hates you?"

Representatives for ACECO — perhaps unsurprisingly — did not respond to a request for comment.

When President Trump announced the project this summer, he named McCrery Architects as the lead design firm. As recently as April, McCrery's site was robust, displaying the firm's prior design projects, its approach to architecture and staff biographies, according to an archived version of the page maintained by the Internet Archive.

mccrery-april-2025.png

McCrery Architects homepage, April 2025

Now, McCrery's website is limited to a single page with a rotating photo, generic email address and phone number. Renderings of the White House ballroom are included in the photo carousel.

mccrery-oct-2025.png

McCrery Architects homepage, October 2025

When CBS News called the number listed on the firm's website, the phone rang several times before a recorded message said the voicemail was full. A McCrery spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment.

Not all companies have shunned attention brought on by their association with the ballroom.

Websites for Clark Construction and AECOM, the lead engineering firm, appear to be intact. Both are large companies — Clark has a national footprint and AECOM is a multinational company valued at $17 billion and publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange.

The smaller businesses that have pulled down their websites are headquartered in the Washington, D.C., area.

Carrier, another multibillion-dollar, publicly traded company, was not shy about its involvement in the ballroom. A company spokesperson proclaimed that Carrier was "honored to provide the new iconic ballroom at the White House with a world-class, energy-efficient HVAC system."


 
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