Opinion

Trump Floats Plan to Supersize Already Over-the-Top โ€˜Arc de Trumpโ€™ by the Potomac

Donald Trump is pushing to build a very large golden arch near the Potomac River. He has looked at smaller designs, but now he appears to prefer a 250 foot model that would sit across from the Lincoln Memorial.

The leader of the idea says the size would mark the nationโ€™s 250th birthday with obvious flair. People close to the plan told reporters the slogan was simple and catchy: โ€œ250 for 250.โ€

The site under discussion is Memorial Circle at the end of the Arlington Memorial Bridge. That small traffic roundabout would be the arch home and it sits near Arlington National Cemetery, the Marine Corps War Memorial, the Netherlands Carillon, and the Lincoln Memorial across the river.

Architects and historians are not thrilled. They warn the arch could dominate the scene and change how visitors see the nearby memorials and the park across the river.

A retired expert on Virginia heritage summed up the worry in plain words. โ€œI would be very concerned about the scale,โ€ Calder Loth told reporters, pointing at the way the arch could steal the view.

He painted a vivid picture for anyone who cares about one neat vista in Arlington. โ€œIt would make Arlington House just look like a dollhouse โ€” or you couldnโ€™t see it all, with the arch blocking the view,โ€ he said.

Loth also asked a bigger question about the city skyline and memory. โ€œHow does it impact the panorama of Washington?โ€ he asked. โ€œWhat is supposed to be doing the speaking?โ€

If built at 250 foot the arch would tower above the Lincoln Memorial and come close to the Capitol in scale. Washington has long had a low skyline because of a 1910 law that limits most buildings to about 130 feet, a rule meant to protect views of monuments and keep the city from feeling crowded or overshadowed by towers. A structure this tall would stand out fast and break from more than a century of tradition.

Traffic is a practical problem too. Memorial Circle already handles a steady flow of cars, tour buses, cyclists, and pedestrians moving between Arlington and downtown Washington. Adding a giant monument there would likely require rerouting traffic, redesigning lanes, and possibly closing parts of the circle for long stretches during construction.

Supporters say a grand arch would boost tourism and show national pride on a big birthday. They argue it could become a new landmark tied to the 250th anniversary celebrations and draw visitors beyond the National Mall. Critics say an oversized monument risks turning a place of memory into a backdrop for selfies and photo ops that compete with nearby war memorials and burial grounds.

For now the plan is in the talk phase. No final design has been approved, no funding has been announced, and local and federal agencies would still need to sign off. Still, the idea of a gilded arch looming over the Potomac has already triggered a familiar debate about taste, symbolism, and whether bigger always means better.

Featured image via YouTube screengrab
Shadrack

Shadrack is a software engineer and political observer who turns messy headlines into clear, data-backed analysis. Fueled by coffee, contrarian opinions, and 42 open tabs, he covers U.S. politics with a focus on legislative impact and digital culture.