For all their furor, the executive orders President Donald Trump has signed can be overturned by the signature of his successor. If and when Democrats are back in control in Washington, the laws the Republican-controlled Congress has passed at his behest can be repealed.
But a 90,000-square-foot ballroom planted on the east side of the White House?
That will be here to stay.
More: How Trump’s personal aesthetic is redefining White House décor: 'I picked it all myself'
Whatever Trump's political legacy turns out to be, in the first six months of his second term he has moved to leave the biggest imprint on the White House complex of any president since John Adams first moved in on Nov. 1, 1800.








