Trump Plans Granite Helipad on White House Lawn
L'essentiel
President Trump plans a $6 million granite helipad on the White House South Lawn, privately funded by Sikorsky Aircraft, to accommodate new, more powerful presidential helicopters that scorch the grass.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
President Trump plans a $6 million granite helipad on the White House South Lawn, privately funded by Sikorsky Aircraft, to accommodate new, more powerful presidential helicopters that scorch the grass.
President Donald Trump has detailed plans to construct a granite helipad on the White House lawn, stating the new landing area is essential for accommodating new, more powerful presidential helicopters.
The project's confirmation Monday arrived as construction crews had already begun work on the South Lawn, where the president had UFC build a temporary arena for a cage fight celebrating his 80th birthday.
Trump said the helipad would be privately funded, with an estimated cost reaching up to $6 million. Speaking to reporters in the Oval Office, he said: "It’s got the seal of the White House on it in granite, in carved granite. It’s really a beautiful thing."
No specific details were provided regarding the project's duration. This initiative represents the latest major construction Trump has overseen, seemingly in an effort to increasingly mold the White House in his own image.
The helipad can handle new choppers, Trump says
Some of Trump's major White House construction projects have relied on public money, even when the president initially suggested otherwise. Still, Trump said that Sikorsky Aircraft, a subsidiary of defense contracting giant Lockheed Martin, would be paying for the helipad.
Asked about the cost of the project and a timeline for its completion, Lockheed Martin responded with a statement reading in part: “This specific contribution was made to the Trust for the National Mall, the National Park Service’s nonprofit organization” and “conducted in full accordance with all applicable laws and regulations.”
In 2024, Sikorsky completed a new fleet of helicopters for use as Marine One, and President Joe Biden took the first flight aboard a modern VH-92A helicopter on his way to the Democratic National Convention in Chicago — the same day the military announced Sikorsky delivered the last of the 23 new aircraft.
But Trump said the new aircraft were more powerful than Vietnam War-era choppers that long had been used as Marine One, and that the modern ones were too potent to land on the White House lawn without damaging the grass.
"It’s not that the grass gets discolored — it gets ripped out,” the president said.
Indeed, the new aircraft has indeed seen limited service because their exhaust vents aim heat downward, scorching the White House South Lawn.
The Marines and Sikorsky have spent years trying to find a solution to the problem, which has meant that the new helicopters haven't been used at the White House. A 2026 Marine Corps aviation plan said the older VH-3Ds will remain in service through the end of this year.
Trump on Monday recalled telling a group of gathered military generals that a White House helipad would solve those problems.
The president said Sikorsky was building the helipad and paying the "full cost” because they “felt a little bit guilty” that the new fleet of helicopters was too powerful to land at the White House.
Trump also said he told builders to “do a beauty” and suggested granite rather than simply laying concrete and painting it white.
“You’re landing on granite, which is the strongest stone,” the president said, noting that the completed landing pad could also be used for other events, like outdoor White House news conferences. He added that the helipad will allow officials to “finally retire 45-year-old helicopters” that had been used as Marine One.
Trump's other projects to remake the White House include tearing up part of the Rose Garden for a patio space reminiscent of his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida and affixing partisan plaques to the wall of the colonnade for a Presidential Walk of Fame.
Trump also had crews redo the bathroom attached to the Lincoln Bedroom and renovate the Palm Room, place new flagpoles on the north and south lawns and demolish the entire East Wing for a sprawling ballroom.
Efforts to improve presidential helicopters go back decades
While the term “Marine One” is applied to a variety of helicopter models that transport presidents, the most iconic and longest serving helicopter to take on the mission is the specially modified VH-3D Sea King helicopter that first entered service in 1978.
In the early 2000s, President George W. Bush, a Republican, began an effort to modernize the helicopter fleet, but the program ran into cost overruns, leading it to be scrapped by President Barack Obama's administration.
Obama, a Democrat, restarted the program, but new, technical issues emerged, and it wasn’t until May 2014 that the military finally awarded Sikorsky a contract to build the next presidential helicopter -- the VH-92A Patriot, which were the aircraft delivered in 2024.
Trump says ‘a lot of love is being put into the White House’
Later Monday, Trump addressed a lunch in the Rose Garden patio space and detailed yet another White House construction project, this one to revamp the columns on the building's north side.
Crews have erected scaffolding and Trump said, “We’ve taken about 150 years of paint off of the columns," noting that, “If you don’t strip the paint off, it gets worse and worse and worse.”
“A lot of love is being put into the White House,” Trump said.
He didn't say who would be covering the cost of the column work.
À surveiller
Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes
New helipad will allow retirement of older Marine One helicopters.
Probable · Moyen terme
Questions ouvertes
- What is the timeline for the helipad's completion?
- Who is funding the column work?




