Looking to get an aerial video of landmarks such as the Statue of Liberty or Hoover Dam? If you’re looking to do it with a drone, you have a week to make it happen before it becomes illegal.

The Federal Aviation Administration on Thursday announced that it would ban drone flights up to 400 feet within the lateral boundaries of the following Department of the Interior sites:

Statue of Liberty National Monument, New York

Boston National Historical Park (U.S.S. Constitution), Boston

Independence National Historical Park, Philadelphia

Folsom Dam, Folsom, Calif.

Glen Canyon Dam, Lake Powell, Ariz.

Grand Coulee Dam, Grand Coulee, Wash.

Hoover Dam, Boulder City, Nev.

Jefferson National Expansion Memorial, St. Louis

Mount Rushmore National Memorial, Keystone, S.D.

Shasta Dam, Shasta Lake, Calif.

The FAA issued the ban using its existing authority under Title 14 of the Code of Federal Regulations, which states that anyone operating an aircraft in what’s called an Air Defense Identification Zone — essentially an area identified as a national security interest — must comply with “special security instructions.”

Those instructions? No drones.

The restrictions go into effect Oct. 5, though the FAA said exceptions could be made if the pilot obtains a permit. Operators who violate the airspace restrictions may be subject to enforcement action, including potential civil penalties and criminal charges, according to an FAA statement.

This is the first time the FAA has restricted drone flights over landmarks. The FAA has placed similar airspace restrictions over military bases.

Many of the areas under the FAA’s new no-drone list are already off-limits to drone flights. The National Park Service opted to ban drones in national parks beginning in 2014 because of “noise and nuisance complaints from park visitors, park visitor safety concerns, and one documented incident in which park wildlife were harassed.”

However, that ban could only prohibit drones taking off and landing on its property, and could not actually control the airspace.

The FAA’s announcement on Thursday closes off the airspace completely to drones.

“It shows a continuing government security concern with drones and may be a harbinger of future restrictions around other national parks,” said aviation attorney Loretta Alkalay.

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There are more than 4.1 million drones in the hands of U.S. pilots, according to a report from Skyogic Research. About 72% of drones worldwide are built by China’s DJI, which sells the popular Mavic and Spark drones, which both cost less than $1,000.

DJI has taken its own strides to limit drones flying over sensitive areas. In 2015, the company announced geofencing, a software feature that acts as a virtual barrier, to completely prevent its drones from flying over “no-fly-zones,” which are mostly airports and Washington, D.C.

A DJI drone made headlines in early 2015 after it crashed onto the White House lawn, prompting the company to issue a software update preventing its drones from flying within a 15.5-mile radius of downtown Washington.