I'M SORRY THAT I WAS GIVEN CREDIT FOR THIS THIS POST. I FOUND IT ON THE CHANS & THOUGHT IT WORTH POSTING, AGAIN SORRY I DON"T DISERVE THE CREDIT.
Great article on whatâs habbining under the White House. Thoughts muh Diggas? Article has a Video in link
When Trump announced a $300 million ballroom at the White House, something went off in my brain. The pattern recognition part started tingling. Ninety thousand square feet, $300 million, underground construction at a secure government facility. I had heard about something like this before. Something with those exact specifications, that scale, that price point.
It took me a minute to place it, but then I remembered: Oracleâs underground data centers in Jerusalem. Built in 2021 for Israeli military intelligence. Nine stories into bedrock, designed to survive missile strikes, built to house AI systems that make life-and-death decisions in real time. Ninety thousand square feet. $319 million. Nearly identical specs to what Trump just announced.
Thatâs the moment I started digging.
Digging In⌠Jerusalem?
Iâd first learned about those Jerusalem bunkers months earlier while researching Larry Ellisonâs relationship with Israel and Oracleâs involvement in the war in Gaza. The facilities werenât typical corporate server farms. They were built for whatâs called data sovereignty - a physical location where Israelâs most sensitive military and intelligence data could exist under complete government control, protected from both digital and physical attacks. When youâre running classified military operations and operating AI systems in active conflict, you canât have that infrastructure vulnerable to destruction. So they built it nine stories down into solid bedrock, 160 feet below the surface, completely invisible to satellites. You know, normal light reading.
Iâd filed that information away at the time, not sure what to make of it. But when Trumpâs ballroom announcement came through with those matching specifications, I knew I needed to look deeper. Because when you see that kind of pattern match, you have to ask: is this actually about a ballroom?
So I started with the most basic question: whoâs building this thing?
The Contractor
The lead contractor is Clark Construction. I went to their website to see what they normally build, and their âCritical Facilitiesâ portfolio immediately caught my attention: the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency Campus, CISA Cybersecurity Headquarters, USCENTCOM Headquarters at MacDill Air Force Base. These arenât ordinary buildings. These are top-secret intelligence campuses and military command centers.
But whatâs listed publicly is only part of the story. I started digging through government contract databases, and thatâs when I found them. Six separate contracts for data centers where even the client names are redacted. Just listed as âConfidential Client Data Center 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6.â The facilities themselves are so classified that acknowledging who theyâre built for would compromise national security.
So building classified data centers for clients they legally cannot name is actually Clark Constructionâs specialty. And they have the contractual mechanisms to hide what theyâre building - they hold a NAVFAC contract with a $950 million ceiling where the total value is public but individual task orders can be classified. Which means you can effectively hide the true cost and scope of specific projects by funneling them through pre-existing military construction contracts.
The Firing
Then on December 4th, something happened that made the picture even clearer. Trump fired his original architect. James McCrery, who designs beautiful churches and the Supreme Court gift shop (say what you want about the guy, but heâs got range), was replaced with someone named Shalom Baranes. When I looked into who Baranes is, I understood immediately what had changed.
McCrery Architects, New Carmel, Wyoming
After September 11th, when the Pentagon needed to be rebuilt and hardened against future attacks, they hired Shalom Baranes. This man designed the Pentagonâs post-9/11 hardening project - the secure wedges, the SCIFs, the bomb-resistant architecture. His entire portfolio is federal facilities requiring classified spaces and hardened infrastructure. And Trump hired him after demolition had already started, after the East Wing was already gone. The aesthetics had stopped mattering. You donât replace your church architect with the Pentagonâs bunker guy because you want prettier chandeliers.
At this point I wanted to see what was actually happening on the ground. If this were really a data center, there would be physical evidence. And data centers need one thing above all else: massive amounts of power.
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DCâs Power-grid
So I started looking at whatâs been happening with DCâs power infrastructure, and thatâs where the timeline becomes impossible to ignore. In August and September 2025, just weeks after Trump announced the ballroom in July, Pepco filed emergency requests for major infrastructure work near the East Wing. Theyâre not making incremental improvements. Theyâre replacing 45-year-old power feeders and increasing power capacity in this area by five times. Five hundred percent.
Hereâs what makes that absurd: downtown DC office occupancy has been declining since COVID. Buildings sit half-empty. Commercial real estate demand has shrunk. Power demand in this area should be flat or declining. But Trump announces a ballroom in July, and by August, emergency filings go in to increase power capacity by 500 percent. Downtown DC is half-empty, but apparently we need five times the power for a dance floor.
During this same period, DC Water increased capital spending by $300 million with specific focus on the Federal Triangle area. The Washington Aqueduct - run by the Army Corps of Engineers - issued warnings that âdata centers are planning to use Potomac River water for cooling.â Theyâre explicitly acknowledging that data center development is driving new infrastructure demands. The GSA Central Heating and Cooling Plant completed upgrades including industrial-scale cooling towers and magnetic bearing chillers designed for cooling infrastructure that generates tremendous heat.
All of this infrastructure work, happening in the immediate aftermath of the ballroom announcement, in the specific geographical area surrounding it.
The Donor List
Then I started looking at whoâs actually paying for this thing. The project is being privately funded, which means no congressional appropriations, no budget hearings, no public scrutiny. We have a partial donor list, though most dollar amounts remain undisclosed. And when I started going through that list, I realized I was looking at it wrong. I shouldnât be looking for dollar amounts. I should be looking at what these companies actually do.
My anatomy of a âballroomâ diagram to show the flow of operations (if my thesis is correct)
Carrier Corporation is donating HVAC systems. But Carrier has a division called Carrier Quantum Leap - their data center solutions offering âcomprehensive energy efficient solutions for data center thermal management.â Are they donating a basic ballroom AC system, or their specialized data center cooling infrastructure?
Paolo Tiramani from Boxabl is on the list; which I find to be curious. Boxabl makes foldable prefab buildings, marketed for disaster relief. But theyâve also sent over 150 units to Guantanamo Bay, they work on Class 5 military installations, and their units come pre-installed with Faraday caging - electromagnetic shielding needed for SCIFs. And Oracleâs own documentation for their Jerusalem facilities describes using modular construction techniques for rapid deployment underground.
Then thereâs Caterpillar, which makes industrial generators providing over 100 megawatts of backup power. Union Pacific, which owns 14,000 miles of classified fiber optic cables serving as the Department of Defenseâs secure telecommunications backbone. Microsoft, Amazon, Google, Palantir. Booz Allen Hamilton, which builds classified networks for intelligence agencies. Blackstone, installing over 200 megawatts of backup power infrastructure.
And you know whatâs not on this list? Baccarat crystal, Versace, Hermès, Tiffany, or Steinway. The luxury brands that would murder their competitors to be associated with White House state dinners. None of them are here.
What we have instead: classified telecommunications networks, data center cooling systems, electromagnetically shielded rooms, and 100-megawatt generators. Classic ballroom essentials.
Donât Worry, The Military Is On It
In October 2025, Trump said something that should have made every journalist in America ask harder questions: âWeâre also working with the military on it because they want to make sure everything is perfect. And the military is very much involved in this.â
The military is very much involved in this ballroom. Which makes perfect sense if you think about it, because if thereâs one thing the Pentagon is known for, itâs their expertise in party planning and floral arrangements. Or maybe the military doesnât typically get involved in ballroom design. Maybe they get involved when youâre building classified facilities and survivable operations infrastructure.
Hereâs what I think is actually happening.
Six months before this construction began, on Trumpâs first full day back in office, Larry Ellison stood next to Trump and Sam Altman at the White House to announce Project Stargate - a $500 billion AI infrastructure initiative for government operations, defense, intelligence, and consolidating federal data across agencies. That infrastructure needs somewhere to physically exist.
Telling James O'Keefe, lol. Good, solid kek my fren.