Early construction and design (1902) In 1902, Congress passed an
appropriations bill that, in addition to repairs and refurnishing, called for the construction of a temporary office building west of the
White House. This led to the removal of government offices from the
East Wing and allocated extra space for additional rooms. Theodore Roosevelt hired
Beaux-Arts architect
Charles Follen McKim of the New York architectural firm
McKim, Mead & White to both rearrange, redecorate, and refurnish the interior of the White House and also to build a discreet office structure on the west. The original structure, some of which is still extant in the present West Wing, was originally intended to be temporary.
Subsequent modifications Roosevelt's successor,
William Howard Taft, in addition to expanding the office wing, constructed the Oval Office, leaving the space previously occupied by the president's desk freely available. However, despite a fire breaking out in the West Wing on
Christmas Eve 1929 during the
Hoover administration, instead of expanding the West Wing as planned, Hoover elected to have the building reconstructed and repaired to avoid public criticism in light of the recent
stock market crash. In 1933, early in the
Franklin Roosevelt administration, the new president began a series of meetings with staff architect
Eric Gugler to enlarge and modify the West Wing as planned previously by his predecessor. When Franklin Roosevelt relocated the Oval Office in 1934, this windowless room received a skylight; while it was initially lit with sunlight from an installed shaft, this would later be replicated in August 1988 with fluorescent light. ==Decorations==