WASHINGTON — Most American presidents aspire to the kind of greatness that prompts future generations to name important things in their honor.
Donald Trump isn't leaving it to future generations.
As the first year of his second term wraps up, his administration and allies have put the president's name on the U.S. Institute of Peace, the Kennedy Center performing arts venue and a new class of battleships.
That's on top of the ''Trump Accounts'' for tax-deferred investments, the TrumpRx government website soon to offer direct sales of prescription drugs, the ''Trump Gold Card'' visa that costs at least $1 million and the Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity, a transit corridor included in a deal his administration brokered between Armenia and Azerbaijan.
On Friday, he plans to attend a ceremony in Florida where local officials will dedicate a 4-mile (6-kilometer) stretch of road from the airport to his Mar-a-Lago estate as President Donald J. Trump Boulevard.
Another example of the unorthodoxy of Trump's career
It's unprecedented for a sitting president to embrace tributes of that number and scale, especially those proffered by members of his administration. And while past sitting presidents have typically been honored by local officials naming schools and roads after them, it's exceedingly rare for airports, federal buildings, warships or other government assets to be named for someone still in power.
''At no previous time in history have we consistently named things after a president who was still in office,'' said Jeffrey Engel, the David Gergen Director of the Center for Presidential History at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. ''One might even extend that to say a president who is still alive. Those kind of memorializations are supposed to be just that — memorials to the passing hero.''