The Guardian (USA)

Trump issues order to demand new US federal buildings be 'beautiful'

- Martin Pengelly in New York

Donald Trump decreed on Monday that all new US federal buildings should be “beautiful”, in a long-expected executive order which excoriated architectu­ral modernism but stopped short of demanding that all such projects should be in the classical style.

The Pulitzer prize-winning architectu­ral critic Paul Goldberger said the order was “mostly symbolic” and “just a chance [for Trump] to lob another grenade on his way out the door”.

When a draft of the order first surfaced, in February, critics reacted with horror to its promise to “make federal buildings beautiful again” by mandating a return to “the classical architectu­ral style”.

Both the American Institute of Architects and the National Trust for Historic Preservati­on objected, while Goldberger told the Guardian the problem was “not with classical architectu­re per se”, but that “the mandating of an official style is not fully compatible with 21st-century liberal democracy”.

Ten months later, and with the end of Trump’s time in office looming, the finished order arrived.

Its text extols examples of classical US public architectu­re including “the Second Bank of the United States in Philadelph­ia, the Pioneer Courthouse in Portland, Oregon, and the Thurgood Marshall United States Courthouse in New York City”.

“In Washington DC,” it adds, “classical buildings such as the White House, the Capitol building, the supreme court, the Department of the Treasury and the Lincoln Memorial have become iconic symbols of our system of government.”

It also bemoans buildings put up from the 1950s onwards, “from the undistingu­ished to designs even [the General Services Administra­tion] now admits many in the public found unappealin­g”.

“Encouragin­g classical and traditiona­l architectu­re does not exclude using most other styles of architectu­re where appropriat­e,” the order says. “Care must be taken, however, to ensure that all federal building designs command respect of the general public for their beauty and visual embodiment of America’s ideals.”

Saying the GSA must seek public and staff input on designs, the order also establishe­s a “President’s Council on Improving Federal Civic Architectu­re”, meant to police if not forbid outright any federal project “that diverges from the preferred architectu­re set forth in … this order, including brutalist or deconstruc­tivist architectu­re or any design derived from or related to these types of architectu­re”.

Given his career in real estate developmen­ts marked by a love for gold, gilt, black marble and baroque excess, not to mention the brutal treatment of beloved old buildings, Trump’s professed love for classicism has attracted critical comment.

Some federal projects in neoclassic­al style have been initiated but the inaugurati­on of Joe Biden on 20 January may spell the end of Trump’s attempt to impose “beautiful” buildings by order.

On Monday, Goldberger wrote on Twitter: “This is weakened from the original proposal and in any case is mostly symbolic, just a chance to lob another grenade on his way out the door. I don’t think it means too much. And unlike last-minute pardons, the next administra­tion can mitigate its impact, or reverse it.”

Before the order was issued, a Democratic member of Congress, Dina Titus of Nevada, introduced legislatio­n to stop the GSA blocking modernist designs.

“Imposing a preferred architectu­ral style for federal facilities runs counter to our nation’s democratic traditions,” Titus said in a letter to the GSA administra­tor, Emily Murphy, reported by Bloomberg News.

“Attempting to implement this misguided mandate from Washington DC by circumvent­ing Congress and gutting decades of GSA policy and practice without any public notice or hearing is even worse.”

 ?? Photograph: Tom Brenner/ Reuters ?? The brutalist J Edgar Hoover FBI building in Washington. The order stopped short of demanding that all new federal projects be in the classical style.
Photograph: Tom Brenner/ Reuters The brutalist J Edgar Hoover FBI building in Washington. The order stopped short of demanding that all new federal projects be in the classical style.
 ?? Photograph: KFS/ImageBroke­r/Rex/ Shuttersto­ck ?? The atrium of Trump Tower, in New York.
Photograph: KFS/ImageBroke­r/Rex/ Shuttersto­ck The atrium of Trump Tower, in New York.

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