Updated
Updated · CNN · Jun 10
Algae Coats $14.2 Million Lincoln Memorial Pool a Day After Refill
Updated
Updated · CNN · Jun 10

Algae Coats $14.2 Million Lincoln Memorial Pool a Day After Refill

3 articles · Updated · CNN · Jun 10

Summary

  • Workers were clearing visible algae from the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool on Wednesday, just one day after the newly renovated basin was refilled and publicly touted by the Trump administration.
  • The Interior Department called it residual algae from supply lines left dormant during eight weeks of construction and said a new ozone nanobubbler filtration system should keep the pool algae-free after startup.
  • The administration had promoted the project as proof Washington was looking "better than ever," while Trump repeatedly highlighted the renovation after long criticizing the pool as leaking and foul.
  • Costs also climbed sharply: Trump first suggested roughly $1.8 million, then $13.1 million, before the project settled at $14.2 million, still below a $35.3 million Obama-era contract estimate.
  • Visitors offered mixed reactions Wednesday, with some praising the pool's reflection and others questioning the blue-painted bottom and whether the spending was worthwhile.

Insights

Why did the reflecting pool's renovation cost soar to $14.2 million under a no-bid contract?
After a $14 million upgrade, why did algae immediately plague the newly refilled reflecting pool?
Will a controversial blue coating and new technology solve the pool's historic algae and leak problems?