During World War II, about 200 concrete bunkers for Nazi soldiers were built along the Danish coast.
Denmark's largest was the Tirpitz Bunker, which measured 7,500 square feet and was located in Blåvand. Named after a German battleship, the bunker never saw military action. Nazi soldiers abandoned its construction in 1945.
For decades, it sat empty — a dark reminder of Nazi-occupied Denmark.
But the bunker has recently taken on a new life. Architecture firm Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG) transformed the partially subterranean building into the Blåvand Bunker Museum, where visitors can learn about the history of WWII and the Danish West Coast.
Take a look inside the museum, which opened in June.
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The Tirpitz Bunker's construction began in August 1944 in Blåvand, Denmark, located about 200 miles west of Copenhagen, and was expected to last a little over a year. At the time, Nazi Germany occupied the country.
Sources: The Guardian and Politiken
The bunker was meant to defend the seaport city of Esbjerg near Blåvand. However, the project was abandoned a few months later in May 1945, when Germany surrendered.
The bunker was designed to house two towers containing two 111-ton naval guns each. As you can see in the photo below, the structures were never finished.
Source: Spangsberg
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