Commission of Fine Arts approved concept plans May 21 for proposed monument at Memorial Circle, while a federal lawsuit and June 4 National Capital Planning Commission review test project's path forward
The proposed commemorative arch in Washington D.C., has received approval from the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts and is now under review by the National Capital Planning Commission, even as a federal judge weighs a lawsuit seeking to halt the project.
Appeals court pauses injunction, letting White House ballroom construction advance into a critical superstructure phase as judges fast-track a June decision.
Below-grade work security-related work can continue on the White House Ballroom site while vertical construction is halted, following a new court order regarding the contentious project.
Even as Gateway tunnel construction resumes after a court-ordered release of federal funds, officials warn the $16B Northeast Corridor megaproject could face another shutdown within months if reimbursements again stall.
Why did federal planners delay a decision on the Trump White House ballroom proposal after hours of testimony—and what engineering details are emerging from project filings?
A federal judge denies an injunction request, allowing excavation to continue as the White House ballroom project nears a pivotal March 5 planning vote.
Ruling that restores EV charging obligations and parallel litigation over discretionary grants raises broader questions about federal funding predictability
A federal ruling restoring electric vehicle charging funds spotlights the boundaries of executive authority to pause federal infrastructure law transportation dollars already authorized by Congress.