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Government bunker (Germany)

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potential investors. The costs of continuous operation of DM 20 million (about EUR 10 million), however, could have been reduced in event of civil use as preparations for potential nuclear attacks would no longer have been required. It also would have been possible to use only one of the five independent sections. Over the following years the tunnels were cleared out, gutted and sealed, costing €16 million in total. In 2001 deconstruction was interrupted briefly due to considerations whether it might be sensible to have a bunker following the
432:) and 203 metres (666 ft) of tunnel more or less in its original condition. Visitors can see the two MAN gates as well as the air locks used to bypass them with the corresponding decontamination rooms, followed by several steel doors and several offices and dormitories. A partially authentically furnished medical unit is also on display. Original equipment from the bunker and guided tours help imagine what life in the bunker once was like. The museum ends with a view into the fully gutted tunnel. 406: 381: 331: 244: 25: 130: 421:. It was opened on 29 February 2008. The German government still owns this remaining part of the bunker and has invested €2.5million for its conversion into a museum. The investment was approved because the estimated costs of €30million for deconstruction were undercut considerably, costing only €16million in total. 338:
Huge gates and ventilation lids were installed that could seal off the bunker hermetically within seconds. Drinking water was drawn from two deep wells. Air filters, supplies, kitchens, medical units, dentist's surgeries, etc. would have allowed for survival without contact with the outside world for
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In 1997, following the decision to move the capital and government seat of re-unified Germany to Berlin, it was decided to abandon the bunker as no concept for civilian use could be found. Only few parts of the fire safety installations had been upgraded, which was a decisive criterion that deterred
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Wintex whereby staff actually worked inside the hermetically sealed bunker for up to 30 days. Such exercises, for instance, involved the passing of bills by an emergency parliament of 22 members, including a mock chancellor and president. The bunker was used for the first time in October 1966 during
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About 180 staff working in three shifts were required for maintaining, repairing and operating the bunker. In 2008 it became publicly known that the shelter would have just about withstood the detonation of a 20 kiloton bomb, comparable to the destructive force of the Hiroshima bomb. Secret surveys
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In the event of a defence situation the bunker would have accommodated the federal president, the chancellor, the joint defense committee, the president of the constitutional court, various ministries as well as civilian and military personnel. Briefings would have been held in large conference and
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The facility was designed to withstand attacks with nuclear weapons and was fitted with autonomous supplies of electric power, fresh air and drinking water. Unlike other fortifications or military bunkers, however, there were no defence systems and it would have been protected by military units
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conducted as early as 1962 had found that 250-times more powerful weapons were to be expected and it had been made clear that the bunker would collapse if ever hit by a nuclear bomb. Despite this known fact, however, construction was continued for political reasons.
275:(Office Marienthal) was constructed inside the existing tunnels which had never been used for the purpose they had initially been built for. Additional tunnels of a total length of 17.3 km were driven and blasted into the soft slate mountains along the 267:
become the target of an attack. After some deliberations the two tunnels were selected as the site for such an installation due to their proximity to Bonn and the rural surroundings which, unlike urban areas, would not attract air raids or missile attacks.
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from inside the bunker. In its final capacity the bunker would have accommodated up to 3,000 people of which all but the federal president and chancellor would have slept in multi-bed dormitories fitted with only very basic furniture.
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Valley to build an emergency seat for the federal government that would allow up 3,000 people to survive an attack for at least 30 days. At the time of construction the total length of all tunnels probably amounted to 19 km.
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era to house the German government, parliament and enough federal personnel needed to keep the government working in the event of war or severe crisis. Located only about 25 kilometres (16 mi) south of
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but never entered into service. After the war, during years of recession, the German state railway company lost interest in the line which was of no economic value and finally abandoned it.
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had been designed for use as a runway and would have been used as an airport for the bunker with spacious aircraft parking spaces at both ends disguised as roadside car parks.
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The bunker complex below the vineyards and forests along the river Ahr was built inside two disused railway tunnels of a former strategic railway line built in preparation of
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Bundesamt für Bauwesen und Raumordnung/Stiftung Haus der Geschichte der Bundesrepublik Deutschland: Der Regierungsbunker. Ernst Wasmuth Verlag, Berlin/Tübingen 2007,
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Between 1930 and 1939 the disused railway tunnels were used to farm mushrooms to gain independence from having to import French fungi. During the later phase of
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stationed nearby. The costs of construction were estimated at DM 3 billion, although no precise figures are known due to the high level of secrecy.
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which were separated by a valley and connected by a 60m deep passageway. The eastern section was partitioned again into two independent parts (
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Ausweichsitz der Verfassungsorgane des Bundes im Krisen- und Verteidigungsfall zur Wahrung von deren Funktionstüchtigkeit (AdVB),
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Construction of the bunker began in 1960 and lasted until 1972. The government bunker, also known by the neutral-sounding name
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Access building to section 2 (East/West) of the government bunker near Marienthal after deconstruction, March 2008
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up to 30 days. In the event of a nuclear attack it would have been possible to continue governing and lead the
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was erected outside the protective cover of the tunnels, which was also referred to under the code name
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museum (Government Bunker Documentation Site) features a cinema, the entrance to former section 1 (
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in English: "Emergency Seat of the Federal Constitutional Organs for the State of Crisis or
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the course of the NATO high command exercise Fallex 66, and for the last time in 1987. The
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The round gate (left) was powered by hydraulics and could seal the entrance within seconds.
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to Maintain their Ability to Function" was a massive underground complex built during the
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Only 203 metres (666 ft) of the original bunker exist today near the town of
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The bunker built beneath 110m of slate rock consisted of two sections named
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The government bunker and its relevance during the cold war (in German)
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several arms manufacturing companies occupied the tunnels and a huge
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In the days of cold war, when Germany was on the front line between
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vineyard still exist, although the doors have been welded shut.
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map rooms situated next to the chancellor's office. Part of the
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The gutted tunnel can be seen at the documentation site today.
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Every two years exercises took place in the bunker as part of
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A website about the bunker by photographer Andreas Magdanz
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Massive underground complex built during the cold war
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Ahr Valley
Germany
State of Defence
Cold War
Bonn
Germany
West Germany
Ahr Valley
Ahrweiler
Dernau
railway tunnels
Strategic Railway
World War I
World War II
concentration camp
forced labourers

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