National Trust for Historic Preservation

03/23/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 03/23/2026 07:29

Unprecedented Coalition of Cultural Heritage and Architecture Groups Sue to Require Federal Review of President Trump’s Kennedy Center Plans

Rebecca Miller, Executive Director, DC Preservation League:

"The Kennedy Center is not a personal project of any president. It is a national cultural monument built to honor John F. Kennedy and to serve the American people. Federal law requires transparency, expert review, and public participation before it can be fundamentally altered."

Carol Quillen, President and CEO, National Trust for Historic Preservation:

"The Kennedy Center is a historically significant architectural icon and a performance venue beloved by millions of Americans. We're concerned that, as with the White House East Wing, the potential scope of planned changes is understated and will result in irreparable loss. We respectfully urge the Administration to follow all required consultative processes. Doing so will improve the design and enable transparency and public engagement-values befitting a government by the people."

Greg Werkheiser, Founding Partner, Cultural Heritage Partners:

"The administration is advancing sweeping changes to some of the nation's most important civic landmarks without transparency or public process. When decisions about America's heritage are made behind closed doors, the rule of law is the only safeguard."

Abbe David Lowell, Founding Member, Lowell & Associates:

"This case is not about politics or aesthetics. It is about whether the President can impose major changes to historic buildings while denying the public voice that federal law requires."

Tad Heuer, Partner, and Greg Craig, Senior Counsel, Foley Hoag:

"We are proud to represent this coalition of cultural heritage and architectural organizations to ensure that the processes in place are followed before irreparable changes are made to an iconic building intended to be a lasting and living memorial to John F. Kennedy."

Illya Azaroff, President, American Institute of Architects:

"Architects have a responsibility to protect the integrity of our nation's civic and cultural landmarks. The Kennedy Center is a public asset that must be shaped through transparency, expertise, and the communities it serves."

Charles A. Birnbaum, Founding President & CEO, The Cultural Landscape Foundation:

"The Kennedy Center campus is a nationally significant example of Modernist design. From its processional arrival experience to its terraces, which afford sweeping views of the Potomac River and civic monuments, landscape architecture is integral to this important cultural monument."

Liz Waytkus, Executive Director, Docomomo US

"It is unconscionable that the administration has already begun actions to degrade and irreparably harm the Kennedy Center. Designed by Edward Durell Stone, the building is a masterwork of Modern architecture and one of the most significant Modern buildings in the Washington, D.C., area. Significant alterations to the Kennedy Center would not only compromise an architectural landmark but would undermine a place deeply tied to the nation's cultural values and to the legacy of leadership that President Kennedy represented."

Ben Thomas, Executive Director, Society of Architectural Historians:

"SAH, a network of institutions and individuals that focus on the history of the built environment and its impact on society, joins the other seven plaintiffs to urge the administration to submit any proposals to alter the Kennedy Center for proper review and deliberation. Decisions that affect our communal cultural heritage should not be made lightly and should follow established guidelines and procedures."

Brad McCauley, President, American Society of Landscape Architects

"The Kennedy Center and its grounds are part of our shared public realm. Federal law requires careful, informed reviews to guide decisions about its future, accounting for preservation law, public input, cultural understanding, and long-term stewardship. Following proper process to honor the Kennedy Center's role as a national civic landmark matters."

Judy Chesser, Chair, Committee of 100 for the Federal City

"The Kennedy Center is a national treasure. Its construction set new standards, from accessibility to acoustics. Without public input and congressional approval as required by law, the Administration's statements that its intentions are only to 'enhance' the Center are not reassuring but are cause for alarm."

National Trust for Historic Preservation published this content on March 23, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on March 23, 2026 at 13:29 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]