The Reflecting Pool: A $16 Million Failure Looking for a Scapegoat
How a rushed renovation using the wrong product on one of America's most iconic landmarks spawned algae, peeling liner, armed soldiers — and a vandalism narrative.
On a normal June morning, the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool mirrors the sky in stillness. Visitors photograph themselves against it. Children stand at its edge. It has done this, more or less, since 1922. But on June 21, 2026 — thirteen days before America's 250th birthday — it is green, peeling, and guarded by the National Guard.
The story of how it got there is not complicated. What is complicated is the story being told about it.
What Actually Happened, In Order
President Trump announces the pool will be resurfaced in "American flag blue." A no-bid contract is awarded to Atlantic Industrial Coatings — a company with no prior federal contracts, but previous work at Trump National Golf Club.
The pool is drained and coated with Rhino Linings PipeLiner 5000 — a product designed for interior pipe lining with no UV protection and no documented use in large open-air aquatic applications. Pool industry professionals, when asked, said they'd never seen it used this way.
Renovation completes. The pool is refilled. Contract costs have ballooned from Trump's public estimate of ~$2 million to over $14 million, eventually reaching $16 million.
Algae is already visible. The Interior Department calls it "residual" and "a normal part of the early process." Water experts say the bloom was entirely predictable: the pool is shallow, open-air, and fed by untreated Tidal Basin water.
Workers dump hydrogen peroxide into the pool. A $1.7 million nanobubble ozone system — awarded via another no-bid contract to an Ohio company owned by a Trump donor — is deployed. The pool stays green.
The blue liner begins peeling from the pool floor in large sheets. The peeling is visible to tourists. Experts explain it: concrete retains water like a sponge, and the liner was applied before the concrete had properly dried — a fundamental application error.
Trump claims the pool was vandalized by saboteurs and links it to "8647" graffiti found nearby. Park Police arrest David Hearn, 67, a former Olympic canoeist, on a misdemeanor destruction of government property charge — after he touched a piece of already-detached liner to feel what it was. The National Guard is deployed to the pool. Citations begin being issued for putting a hand in the water.
Trump announces the pool will be drained again for repairs. The administration says "multiple arrests" have been made for vandalism. Soldiers stand watch over green water while the pool's own contractor-caused failure goes unaddressed.
Why the Liner Failed: The Engineering Case
"What do you expect? You're basically taking natural, untreated river water, pumping it in and expecting it to do something different from what it would do out in the open."
— Cochise Wanzer II, President, Pool Service Company, Arlington VA
Who Gets Arrested, and For What
- Tourist puts hand in water — cited
- Cyclist touches already-detached liner — arrested, misdemeanor destruction charge
- Anyone making contact with pool water — National Guard deployed as deterrent
- Charged under: destruction of national monuments
- Threatened penalty: years in federal prison
- Contractor who chose wrong product for the application
- Contractor who applied liner before concrete dried
- Officials who approved no-bid contract without review
- January 6th participants who destroyed the actual US Capitol — pardoned
- No accountability for $14M cost overrun from $2M estimate
The legal asymmetry is difficult to explain on the merits. The peeling liner that David Hearn touched was already detached before he arrived. The algae bloomed before any tourist got near the water. The construction failures were documented by experts before the vandalism narrative emerged.
The Ellipse. The Pool. The Pattern.
An aerial photograph taken this week shows the Ellipse — the green park directly south of the White House — nearly entirely dead and brown. Heavy equipment, staging infrastructure, and vehicle traffic from the America 250 preparations have stripped the historic lawn of its grass.
The Reflecting Pool is green with algae and shedding its new liner. The Ellipse is brown where it was green. Two of Washington's most photographed public spaces have been significantly damaged in the run-up to the celebration meant to showcase them — both as a result of rushed work that bypassed the standard federal review processes that exist precisely to prevent this.
The Cultural Landscape Foundation, which sued the government over the pool refurbishment, put it plainly: the NPS itself admitted in writing that the project was ineligible for the "streamlined review" it was given — but proceeded anyway under White House pressure. The problems that followed were, in their words, "foreseeable."
"In their haste, the administration created a foreseeable problem that could have been addressed if the established and required regulatory process was followed."
— Charles A. Birnbaum, The Cultural Landscape Foundation
The vandalism narrative arrived after the failures became undeniable. The National Guard arrived after the narrative did. The arrests and citations followed the Guard. At each step, the story shifted from what went wrong with the construction to who is attacking us.
The Reflecting Pool has weathered a century of summers, protests, inaugurations, and algae. What it had not previously faced was a $16 million renovation that used a pipe liner on an open-air pool, applied it to wet concrete, and then blamed the public when it peeled.
On July 4th, millions will come to the National Mall. The question is not whether the pool will be presentable. The question is whether the story of how it got this way will be told honestly — or reflected in something else entirely.
