Presidential Emergency Operations Center Renovation of the East Wing | |
Type Of Activity | Renovation |
Location | |
Location | The White House, Washington DC |
Date of Activity | 2025 |
Coordinates | |
White House Renovation Includes Major Security Upgrades Beneath the East Wing
President Donald Trump’s sweeping renovation of the White House — a project that has drawn both fascination and fierce criticism — includes one of the most secure and secretive facilities in the U.S. government.
As part of the overhaul, Trump has ordered the temporary demolition of the East Wing, which will be rebuilt and modernized to house the new White House State Ballroom. The East Wing, originally expanded during World War II, conceals the Presidential Emergency Operations Center (PEOC) — the underground bunker designed to protect the president and senior staff during national emergencies.
A White House official told the Daily Caller News Foundation that the modernization effort encompasses the entire East Wing to support Trump’s new ballroom — along with the enhanced security features. Trump himself has said that the U.S. military is “deeply involved” in the work, though the White House has not clarified the specific role of defense personnel.
According to a 2020 Military Times report, the PEOC was originally built as a Cold War–era facility capable of withstanding a direct nuclear strike. Access is granted only via a heavily secured elevator behind multiple vault doors equipped with biometric controls. The precise specifications of the facility remain classified.
Recently, the Treasury Department warned employees not to take or share photos of the East Wing demolition, citing concerns over “sensitive items, including security features or confidential structural details,” according to the Wall Street Journal. The directive followed viral social media posts showing heavy machinery tearing into the historic structure.
The Underground White House: A History of Hidden Construction
The White House’s underground complex has evolved quietly over decades of reconstruction.
The East Wing was first constructed in 1902 under President Theodore Roosevelt and rebuilt in 1942 under President Franklin D. Roosevelt, primarily to conceal the newly built underground command center.
The White House tunnel network began during the Truman administration in the early 1950s, when the aging mansion was gutted and rebuilt with steel and concrete. During that reconstruction, a tunnel was installed linking the West Wing and East Wing, allowing access to the PEOC and other shelters.
The East Wing was first constructed in 1902 under President Theodore Roosevelt and rebuilt in 1942 under President Franklin D. Roosevelt, primarily to conceal the newly built underground command center.
| East Wing Tunnel System 1950 |
| Present day tunnel |
On September 11, 2001, President George W. Bush’s National Security Council met in the PEOC as the terrorist attacks unfolded on the Twin Towers. First Lady Laura Bush, in her memoir, described descending through “big steel doors” and “unfinished subterranean hallways” to reach the secure conference room adjacent to the PEOC command center.
| VP Cheney on a conference call in the PEOC’s conference room |
| Before and after the West Wing upgrade |
A former WHCA member who worked in the PEOC during the Carter administration said the underground facility had long needed modernization.
“When he worked in the PEOC almost 50 years ago, it was full of rats, roaches, and asbestos dust,” the former member said. “If the East Wing had to come down to rebuild the PEOC, it was probably overdue. The ballroom might be optional, but the PEOC is essential for continuity of government.”
| Demolition starts of the East Wing |
| East Wing totally demolished |
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