Before-and-After Satellite Photos Show Trump’s Reflecting Pool Changes

President Donald Trump has made many changes to Washington, DC, since returning for a second, non-consecutive term. One such change is visible from space.

In April, Trump announced that he had chosen Atlantic Industrial Coatings — a contractor he initially said worked on his Virginia golf club before later walking back that claim — to renovate the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool ahead of America’s 250th anniversary, telling reporters its “filthy” water was “not representative of the country.”


Donald Trump with a rendering of his renovations to the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool.

President Donald Trump with a rendering of his renovations to the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool. 

Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images



The $14.2 million project, which Trump initially estimated would cost between $1.5 and $2 million, included sealing and painting the bottom of the 2,030-foot-long pool an “American flag blue” to better reflect the Washington Monument.

In a satellite image of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool taken on March 10, 2026, before the renovation began, the water appeared green due to widespread algae growth.


A satellite image of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool in Washington, DC.

A satellite image of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool on March 10. 

Vantor/Handout via REUTERS



A satellite photo taken on June 7, a day after Trump said the project was completed, showed the pool’s darker surface.


A satellite image of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool being refilled with dark blue water.

A satellite image of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool on June 7. 

Vantor/Handout via REUTERS



Indeed, the reflection of the Washington Monument could once again be seen on the water in a photo taken at the site on June 9.


The Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool.

The Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool on June 9. 

Anna Rose Layden/Getty Images



In a Truth Social post on June 6, Trump celebrated the refreshed reflecting pool and touted his other planned White House renovations and additions to DC’s landscape.

“It was originally opened in 1922, but never functioned properly — now it does!” he wrote. “Thank you President Trump, thank you Department of the Interior — AND THE BEST IS YET TO COME with The Trump Promenade at The Lincoln Memorial, and The Triumphal Arch, which will be, along with the White House Ballroom, when completed, the Greatest Structure in Washington.”

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