About Blair House

Deeply ingrained in our nation’s history, Blair House has served as the home away from home for visiting chiefs of state, heads of government, and their delegations since 1942.

An invitation from the President of the United States to occupy this historic residence is an honor of the highest significance. Operated by the Office of the Chief of Protocol, U.S. Department of State (www.state.gov/s/cpr), Blair House provides accommodations for visiting foreign delegations and office space for State Department protocol, security, facilities, and curatorial representatives, as well as for the Blair House Foundation.

The Blair House staff extends the finest of American hospitality to its guests, ensuring their experience is cordial, comfortable and secure and appropriately conveys the honor to which they are entitled. When visiting leaders reside here, the flags of their nations fly proudly over Blair House, a courtesy that serves as both a gracious welcome and a symbol of the home’s crucial role in diplomatic relations.

Inside the Home

Composed of four seamlessly connected townhomes—two on Pennsylvania Avenue and two facing Lafayette Park on Jackson Place—Blair House retains the unique outward appearance of each original house with a carefully integrated interior.

Today, the complex contains more than 120 rooms, a total area of 60,600 square feet, and a staff of 18 full-time employees to oversee all aspects of hospitality and maintenance.

Blair House has 14 guestrooms, each with a full bathroom, three formal dining rooms, two large conference rooms, a hot and cold kitchen overseen by an executive chef and sous chef, a fully equipped beauty salon, an exercise room, and an in-house laundry facility.

Rooms of Blair House

The Gardens

The Blair House gardens were created during the major renovation of the house in the 1980s and were funded through generous donations from the following individuals:

  • Mr. and Mrs. Jack Massey: Front gardens (facing Pennsylvania Avenue)

  • Arthur and Janet Ross: Arthur and Janet Ross Garden (large interior garden, above)

  • Fleur Cowles: Small interior courtyard

Mr. and Mrs. Ross subsequently endowed the gardens to maintain and preserve them in perpetuity.