Preservation groups sue Trump to block Kennedy Center overhaul 24-Mar 00:12

A coalition of U.S. historic preservation and architectural organizations sued President Donald Trump and the Kennedy Center's board on Monday, seeking to block a ​major reconstruction of the Washington performing arts complex.

The National Trust for Historic ‌Preservation in the United States, the American Institute of Architects and six other groups alleged in a lawsuit in federal court in Washington that the Trump administration launched the project without required congressional approval ​and bypassed mandatory federal reviews.

The organizations contend the planned project, which will require ​the closure of the building for two years, goes beyond what the ⁠Kennedy Center's governing law permits. That law limits the board's authority to repairs and ​improvements necessary to maintain the building's basic functionality, according to the lawsuit.

“The Kennedy Center is ​not a personal project of any president,” Rebecca Miller, executive director of the DC Preservation League, said in a statement. “It is a national cultural monument built to honor John F. Kennedy and to serve ​the American people.”

The White House and Kennedy Center did not immediately respond to requests ​for comment.

The Kennedy Center overhaul is part of Trump’s ambitious effort to remake Washington, including the planned construction ‌of ⁠a 90,000-square-foot ballroom on the site of the White House's East Wing that Trump demolished last year.

A federal judge in Washington is expected to rule this month whether to freeze work on the ballroom project, in a separate lawsuit brought by the National Trust.

The Kennedy ​Center opened in 1971 ​as a living ⁠memorial to the late President John F. Kennedy. Monday's lawsuit alleges the Trump administration already caused unlawful damage to the building by ​repainting its 200 gold columns white and adding new exterior signage placing ​Trump's name ⁠above Kennedy's.

Further renovations on the building are set to begin after the July 4 Independence Day holiday.

Trump has defended his plans to close the Kennedy Center for two years of ⁠renovation, saying ​it was necessary to complete the overhaul quickly.

"When you ​do marbles, you can't have people walking over the marble every night, as it's drying and setting, and ​going to a play," he said.