Trump Pushes 250‑Foot 'Independence Arch' in DCA Flight Path
President Donald Trump says he wants a new triumphal 'Independence Arch' at the western end of the National Mall to be 250 feet tall—"the biggest one of all"—even though the proposed site lies directly under low‑altitude flight paths into nearby Reagan National Airport. Speaking to reporters on Air Force One, Trump framed the arch, timed to the nation’s 250th anniversary, as a signature legacy project that would dwarf Mexico City’s 220‑foot Monumento a la Revolución and stand more than twice as high as the 99‑foot Lincoln Memorial across the Potomac. The White House has not submitted anything to the FAA’s obstruction‑evaluation system, and, amid the current partial shutdown, the agency has not commented on how such a structure would interact with tightly constrained river‑follow approaches already under intense scrutiny after a January 2025 Black Hawk–American Airlines midair collision over the Potomac that killed 67 people and led the government to admit liability in December. A Trump spokesman described the arch as destined to be "one of the most iconic landmarks" in the world and part of a broader push to remake federal architecture that also includes a planned two‑year closure and reconstruction of the Kennedy Center, but offered no cost estimate. Aviation‑safety experts and local observers online are already questioning how a 250‑foot obstacle in the DCA corridor would square with post‑crash concerns about altitude margins, controller workload and obstruction clearance on approaches that already thread between the Mall and the Pentagon at relatively low altitude.
📌 Key Facts
- Trump is proposing a 250‑foot 'Independence Arch' at the Potomac end of Memorial Bridge, opposite the Lincoln Memorial, as a gate to Washington, D.C.
- The structure would sit under the river‑hugging flight paths used by Reagan National Airport because planes cannot overfly the Mall or Pentagon and already operate at relatively low altitudes there.
- The proposal comes one year after a January 2025 Black Hawk–American Airlines collision over the Potomac at about 278 feet that killed 67 people; the U.S. government admitted liability in December 2025.
- No filing for the arch appears yet in the FAA’s Obstruction Evaluation/Airport Airspace Analysis system, and the agency has not commented due to the partial shutdown.
- The White House is simultaneously pushing a two‑year Kennedy Center closure and rebuild as part of a broader campaign to reshape key federal landmarks ahead of the 250th anniversary.
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