Situation Room in White House gets $50 million gut renovation. Here's how it turned out.
The White House Situation Room, where the president works through major national security crises with top national security officials, just underwent a $50 million gut renovation, and the revamped secret complex was just unveiled Friday morning.
The "room," which is in fact a 5,500-square-foot highly secure complex of conference rooms and offices on the ground floor of the West Wing, is generally shrouded in secrecy. History happens here — it's where President Barack Obama and his team, including then-Vice President Joe Biden, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and current Secretary of State Antony Blinken, watched the raid that took down al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in 2011. In 2019, President Donald Trump monitored the operation that killed Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. President Lyndon Johnson went over Vietnam War plans here, too.
Presidents also use the room to discuss sensitive government matters and converse with foreign leaders.
The renovation took a year to complete.
Here is what it looks like now:
The White House opened the classified space to a group of reporters this week for a rare visit to show off the new look. President Biden took a tour Tuesday and then received an intelligence briefing in the space, said Marc Gustafson, the Situation Room director.
"He loved it, he thought the update was fantastic," Gustafson said.
The president thanked everyone who worked on the renovations and shared a video on social media of the ribbon cutting. "Folks, the newly renovated White House Situation Room is up and running," Mr. Biden wrote. "My thanks to everyone who worked on this incredible facility."
In the video released by the White House, the president comments, "Pretty fancy," as he enters the space. Officials present him with a presidential seal for the room carved from wood from President John F. Kennedy's conference room.
The renovated space has a modern-but-vintage vibe. Old floors, furniture, computers and other tech were stripped out and replaced with pristine mahogany paneling from Maryland, stonework from a Virginia quarry, LED lights that can change colors and flat-screen panels. See-through glass offices fade to opaque with the press of a button.
But there are still a number of landline phones because cellphones are prohibited in the secure space for security reasons. (There are cubbies to stow phones near a door leading outside, where a baggie with cocaine was found earlier this year.)
Access is tightly controlled and generally restricted to the president's national security and military advisers. Anyone listening in on classified briefings needs clearance. Even the contractors working on the renovation had to get temporary security clearances. Illuminated signs flash green for declassified and red for classified.
The hush-hush complex was created in 1961 by the Kennedy administration after the Bay of Pigs invasion. President John F. Kennedy believed there should be a dedicated crisis management center where officials could coordinate intelligence faster and better.
It was an upgrade, to be sure. But it wasn't exactly comfortable: Nixon administration official Henry Kissinger described the space as "uncomfortable, unaesthetic and essentially oppressive."
After the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the White House did a significant Situation Room update, along with a broader upgrade to presidential communications on Air Force One and the presidential helicopter. Presidents used the complex for secure video conferences before such tech became more portable. The last renovation was in 2007.
The complex is staffed around the clock by military and civilian personnel who monitor breaking developments worldwide.
It has a reception area with a U.S. seal in stonework. Behind that is the main conference room, known as the "JFK room." To the right are a smaller conference room and two soundproof "breakout rooms." To the left is the "watch floor," a 24-7 operations center.
"It's a marriage of the traditional and the modern," Gustafson said of the new space.
Workers dug five feet underground to make more room and install cutting-edge technology allowing White House officials to bring together intelligence from different agencies with the push of a few buttons.
"Now we have all the capabilities," Gustafson said.
For those in the know, referring to the "sit room" is out. It's the "whizzer," stemming from the complex's acronym: WHSR. (Washington love its acronyms.)
Gustafson said the goal is to never need a complete gut renovation again. The new space was designed so panels can be removed and updated and new technology swapped in, usually with less space needs. A room once taken up by computer servers has become a smaller conference room.
The JFK room has a long wooden table with six leather chairs on each side and one at the head for the president. Leather armchairs line the walls. A giant, high-tech screen runs the length of the back wall. A 2-foot (0.6-meter) seal is positioned at the president's end of the room, larger than the old seal.
There aren't many photos of the Situation Room, but one of the most famous is the image of Obama, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Vice President Biden and others watching the bin Laden operation.
That took place around the corner from the JFK room in a smaller conference room that no longer exists. It's been cut out entirely from the space and sent off to Obama's presidential library, Gustafson said. In its place are two smaller rooms.
Another item preserved for history is an old phone booth that stood in the complex. It was sent to storage for Biden's eventual presidential library. Gustafson didn't know if anything had been sent to Trump.
Gustafson said staff members have to be ready to prepare rooms for classified briefings on a moment's notice, and Biden has been known to pop in to meetings unexpectedly, particularly as Russia was invading Ukraine.
While the area was closed for renovation, White House officials used other secure spots on the campus. Gustafson said the renovated Situation Room is having a soft opening of sorts: About 60% of the staff are back in the space with more coming every day.
One of the upgrades Gustafson highlighted is the ability to swap out the different 2-foot-diameter seals that hang on the JFK room wall, depending on who is in the meeting. Seals for the president, vice president and executive staff are kept in a nearby closet and can be quickly subbed.
Gustafson said visitors previously remarked that the room didn't reflect Hollywood's grand imagining of the space.
He said they now declare: "This looks like the movies."
Weijia Jiang contributed to this report