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Near The Front Lines In Iraq, An Homage To The White House

Construction workers in Erbil, in the Kurdish north of Iraq, work on Kurdish business tycoon Shihab Shihab's version of the White House.
Leila Fadel NPR
Construction workers in Erbil, in the Kurdish north of Iraq, work on Kurdish business tycoon Shihab Shihab's version of the White House.

The banister of the grand staircase inside the Kurdish version of the White House is covered in 21-karat gold leaf.
Leila Fadel NPR
The banister of the grand staircase inside the Kurdish version of the White House is covered in 21-karat gold leaf.

There are a lot of American knockoffs in the Kurdish parts of northern Iraq: Burger Queen is Burger King's twin, and instead of Papa John's, people get their pizza at PJ's.

The latest knockoff comes courtesy of Kurdish businessman Shihab Shihab after he decided he'd like to live in the White House. So he's building one for himself, his wife and his child — a mere 50 miles or so from a raging war against the Sunni extremist group that calls itself the Islamic State, or ISIS.

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The sound of drills, shovels and hammers fill the air in Erbil's Dream City, a district filled with ostentatious villas for the rich.

Construction workers are toiling away on the replica of the U.S. president's home in Washington.

But this one is a bit more new money, with Greek marble instead of sandstone making up the façade, complete with marble columns and the signature white portico of the White House facing Pennsylvania Avenue.

"I wanted a house people would talk about," Shihab says. "I wanted to create a new landmark that rivals the citadel. And I think if you have money you should live in luxury."

And Shihab has money: He built the first shopping mall in the semi-autonomous region of Kurdistan.

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But the similarities to the White House stop as soon as you walk inside. The bathrooms are finished with Italian tiles; 21-karat gold leaf is being applied to the ceiling and columns in the two huge dens as well as the banisters on the grand staircase.

Shihab plans to put a nine-foot crystal chandelier in the foyer. And one master suite isn't enough for Shihab, he's building two.

When asked how many bedrooms the house has, he laughs and replies that he doesn't know, the place is too big for him to remember.

We walk downstairs to the Turkish bath, indoor swimming pool surrounded by intricately designed Turkish tiles, and a multi-colored room that will be the gym. All improvements, he says, on the original White House.

Shihab's White House is more than 32,300 square feet (compared to 55,000 square feet in the real White House). And when it's done he hopes people talk about it as much as they talk about the White House in times of crisis.

He has a dream for President Obama to come to Kurdistan.

"If Obama comes, I will invite him to come here," Shihab says. "We will invite him to have Erbil kebab and fish."

And maybe the president will leave with some decorating ideas.

Copyright 2014 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.