Crews were seen rolling out a striking blue coating across the bottom of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool on Saturday as a major renovation project is transforming the iconic water basin between the Lincoln Memorial and the Washington Monument.
Workers in hard hats and high-visibility vests lined the drained basin, applying the vivid surface as equipment and utility vehicles idled nearby.
The renovation is part of a broader push by President Donald Trump to “beautify” the nation’s capital under a federal initiative aimed at restoring monuments and public spaces.
Photos show the massive pool emptied of water, its concrete floor exposed as crews methodically spread the coating across large sections of the basin.
Officials said the overhaul is part of a broader federal push to spruce up Washington, though the exact scope and timeline of the project have not been fully detailed.
The effort follows a March executive order directing the Interior Department to lead a sweeping “safe and beautiful” initiative focused on restoring monuments and improving public spaces across the capital.
The Reflecting Pool itself has long faced structural and maintenance challenges, including chronic water loss, aging infrastructure and an underperforming treatment system, according to federal records.
A 2023 National Park Service project sheet flagged deteriorating expansion joints, undersized circulation lines and an inadequate ozone system as key issues requiring repair.
That same document noted the pool required tens of millions of gallons of additional water annually, driving costs that exceeded $1 million in a single year.
Trump abandoned a far more ambitious plan to replace the pool with a granite redesign that was expected to take three years and cost roughly $301 million.
In its place, he opted for a fast-track solution: a blue “industrial-grade” coating he said would cost about $1.5 million to $2 million and be completed in a matter of weeks.
Contract records tied to the work — including resurfacing and water-treatment components — suggest the total cost could exceed $8 million, raising questions about the gap between the public estimate and actual spending.
The overhaul comes against the backdrop of longstanding structural issues at the Reflecting Pool.
Federal records show it required 71 million additional gallons of water in 2019 alone, driving annual costs above $1 million.
The system has also been plagued by failing pipes, deteriorating joints and an underperforming treatment setup.