The Oval Office has been expanded, renovated, and redecorated several times throughout US history.
The Blue Room has had varying designs of blue wallpaper and blue curtains.
Truman renovated the State Dining Room in the '50s, and Jacqueline Kennedy restored it in the '60s.
The White House has 132 rooms, and each new president gets $100,000 to redecorate them.
We traced the histories of three significant White House rooms — the Oval Office, the Blue Room, and the State Dining Room — to see how their designs have changed over the years.
The Oval Office is the president's formal work space.
Biden's Oval Office also includes busts of fellow progressives and activists showcased throughout the room: Robert F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King Jr., Rosa Parks, Eleanor Roosevelt, and labor leader and civil rights activist Cesar Chavez.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt used the Blue Room as his temporary office while the Oval Office was being remodeled in 1934.
By 1940, Roosevelt cleared out and returned to the Oval Office.
In 1963, The Blue Room displayed various antiques and paintings.
It also featured striped wallpaper.
Heavy blue curtains covered the windows in the 1970s.
The striped wallpaper was replaced with dark blue.
First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton unveiled a renovated Blue Room in 1995.
The room was remodeled after the Committee for the Preservation of the White House recommended that it be refurbished.
Most notably, the blue wallpaper was replaced with yellow wallpaper.
The Blue Room isn't just for ceremonial greetings — in 2001, George W. Bush met with British Prime Minister Tony Blair there before addressing the nation in the wake of September 11.
The Blue Room is particularly festive during the holidays.
For the Obamas' first Christmas in the White House in 2009, the Blue Room was adorned with an 18-foot high Douglas fir illuminated with LED lights.
The Blue Room houses the official White House Christmas tree.
During the Reagan presidency, the State Dining Room was decorated with yellow drapes and red tablecloths.
Back when Bill Clinton was the governor of Arkansas, he spoke at the White House in 1987.
The State Dining Room was decorated with pink flowers to welcome Australian Prime Minister John Howard in 2006.
It featured a cream-colored carpet and matching curtains.
A funky purple tablecloth with green chair cushions brightened up the State Dining Room in 2012 when David Cameron visited the White House.
The tables were set were in honor of David Cameron's visit to the White House.
It can transform into a performance space with mood lighting.
At a post-state dinner reception for the prime minister of Japan in 2015, the State Dining Room was dramatically lit in purple.
Trump was the first president since the 1920s to not host a state dinner during his first year in office.
He did host two state dinners during his presidency: President Emmanual Macron of France in 2018 and Prime Minister Scott Morrison of Australia in 2019.
Biden has used the room for meetings and formal events, but he didn't host a state dinner until almost two years into his time in office.
The State Dining Room features the same curtains and rug from the Trump administration.
For his first state dinner in December, Biden hosted French President Emmanuel Macron in a glass pavilion on the South Lawn of the White House.
The event featured a performance by Jon Batiste and a menu including Maine lobster and crème fraîche ice cream, Politico reported.