West Wing

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The West Wing (lower right) at night in December 2006
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The West Wing is connected to the Executive Residence via the West Colonnade

The West Wing of the White House is the location of the office space of the president of the United States.<ref name="insidethewhitehouse">Template:Cite web</ref> The West Wing contains the Oval Office,<ref name=oval>Template:Cite web</ref> the Cabinet Room,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> the Situation Room,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and the Roosevelt Room.<ref name="roos">Template:Cite web</ref>

The West Wing's three floors include offices for the vice president, the White House chief of staff, the counselor to the president, the senior advisor to the president, the White House press secretary, and their support staffs. Adjoining the press secretary's office, in the colonnade between the West Wing and the Executive Residence, is the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room, along with workspace for the White House press corps.

History

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Aerial view of the West Wing with solar panels visible on the roof of the Cabinet Room in 1984.
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The main entrance on the north side in October 2007.

Before the construction of the West Wing, offices for the president and his staff were on the eastern end of the second floor of the Executive Residence.<ref name="insidewh">Template:Cite web</ref> However, when Theodore Roosevelt became president, he found that the existing offices in the mansion were insufficient to accommodate his family of six children as well as his staff.<ref name="Life in the West Wing">Template:Cite web</ref>

A year later, in 1902, First Lady Edith Roosevelt hired McKim, Mead & White to separate the living quarters from the offices, to enlarge and modernize the public rooms, to re-do the landscaping, and to redecorate the interior.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Congress approved over half a million dollars for the renovation.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

The West Wing was originally intended as a temporary office structure;<ref name="insidewh" /> the site where it was built had formerly been occupied by stables and greenhouses. The president's rectangular office and the adjacent cabinet room were located in the eastern third of the West Wing, approximately where the Roosevelt Room is now.<ref name="Seale">William Seale, The President's House (White House Historical Association, 1986), pp. 946-49.</ref>

In 1909, William Howard Taft expanded the building southward, covering the tennis court. He placed the first Oval Office at the center of the addition's south facade, reminiscent of the oval rooms in the Executive Residence.<ref name=insidewh />

Herbert Hoover remodeled the West Wing early in his presidency, excavating a partial basement and supporting it with structural steel. The completed reconstruction lasted less than seven months.<ref name="Seale"/> On December 24, 1929, the West Wing was significantly damaged<ref name=oval /> by a four-alarm fire, the most destructive to strike the White House since the Burning of Washington 115 years earlier. Caused either by a faulty or blocked chimney flue or defective wiring, the fire began in the attic storage space where an estimated 200,000 government pamphlets quickly ignited.<ref name="Christmas Eve">Treese, Joel D. Phifer, Evan. The Christmas Eve West Wing Fire of 1929. White House Historical Association. Retrieved June 4, 2020</ref> Fortunately, many important documents had recently been moved to the Library of Congress due to the remodeling of the West Wing.<ref name="Fire">"Fire Wrecks The White House Offices; Hoover Rushes from Party to Watch it; Aides Brave Smoke to save his papers". The New York Times. December 25, 1929. Retrieved December 5, 2020.</ref> During 1930, Hoover had the West Wing rebuilt and added air-conditioning.<ref name="Life in the West Wing"/>

The fourth and final major reorganization was undertaken by Franklin D. Roosevelt. Dissatisfied with the size and layout of President Hoover's West Wing, he engaged New York architect Eric Gugler to redesign it in 1933. To create additional space without increasing the apparent size of the building, Gugler excavated a full basement, added a set of subterranean offices under the adjacent lawn,<ref>The underground offices became the Situation Room and the White House Mess. 1938 photo, showing courtyard lighting the underground offices from Library of Congress.</ref> and built an unobtrusive "penthouse" storey.<ref name="Seale"/> The directive to wring the most office space out of the existing building resulted in narrow corridors and generally small staff offices. Gugler's most notable change was the addition to the east side containing a new Cabinet Room, Secretary's Office, and Oval Office.<ref name="Seale"/> The location of the new Oval Office gave presidents greater privacy, allowing them to slip back and forth between the Executive Residence and the West Wing outdoors on the covered portico, without being in the view of the staff or press indoors.<ref name=oval />

As the size of the president's staff grew over the latter half of the 20th century, the West Wing could no longer house the entire staff. Today, most of the staff members of the Executive Office of the President are located in the adjacent Eisenhower Executive Office Building.

Ground floor

The ground floor is partially a basement, as the White House was located on a hill.

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Ground Floor plan

Situation Room

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White House Mess

The West Wing ground floor is also the site of a small restaurant operated by the Presidential Food Service and staffed by Naval culinary specialists and called the White House Mess.<ref>White House Info. This website provides detailed information about White House related topics of interest. https://whitehouse.gov1.info/white-house-mess/</ref><ref>_website of interest: White House Museum http://www.tysto.com/west-wing/mess-hall.htm</ref> It is located underneath the Oval Office, and was established by President Truman on June 11, 1951.<ref name="allhands">Template:Cite news</ref> Template:Clear

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First floor

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The first floor plan of the West Wing

Cabinet Room

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Oval Office

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Press Briefing Room

Template:Main article During the 1930s, the March of Dimes constructed a swimming pool so that Franklin Roosevelt could exercise, as therapy for his polio-related disability. Richard Nixon had the swimming pool covered over to create the Press Briefing Room, where the White House press secretary gives daily briefings.<ref name=ww>Template:Cite web</ref>

Roosevelt Room

Template:Main article Originally this space was the office of Theodore Roosevelt, but later it was converted into a meeting room. It became known as the "Fish Room" because Franklin D. Roosevelt kept an aquarium there and because both he and John F. Kennedy displayed trophy fish on the walls.

In 1969, Richard Nixon renamed the room in honor of the two presidents Roosevelt: Theodore, who first constructed the West Wing, and Franklin, who built the current Oval Office. By tradition, a portrait of Franklin D. Roosevelt hangs over the mantel of the Roosevelt Room<ref name=roos /> during the administration of a president from the Democratic Party and a portrait of Theodore Roosevelt hangs during the administration of a Republican president (although Bill Clinton chose to retain the portrait of Theodore Roosevelt above the mantel). In the past, the portrait not hanging over the mantel was displayed on the opposite wall. However, during the first term of George W. Bush, an audio-visual cabinet was placed on the opposite wall to provide secure audio and visual conference capabilities across the hall from the Oval Office.

West Colonnade

In 2025, Donald Trump unveiled the Presidential Walk of Fame on the West Colonnade. The Walk features black-and-white photographs of the 47 presidents in gold frames, except for one. In place of Joe Biden, Trump added a photograph of an autopen, in a snub to his predecessor.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

White House press corps

Template:Main article The journalists, correspondents, and others who are part of the White House press corps have offices near the press briefing room.

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Second floor

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Second Floor plan

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Depiction on The West Wing TV series

Template:Main article In 1999, The West Wing television series brought greater public attention to the workings of the presidential staff, as well as to the location of those working in the West Wing. The show followed the working lives of a fictional Democratic U.S. president, Josiah Bartlet, and his senior staff. When asked whether the show accurately captured the working environment in 2003, Press Secretary Scott McClellan commented that the show portrayed more foot traffic and larger rooms than in the real West Wing.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

References

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