Redesign of house where Hitler was born to start in October, says Austrian ministry
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After years of legal wrangling, the Austrian government will turn the house into a police station with a human rights training centre.
PHOTO: AFP
VIENNA – The redesign of Adolf Hitler’s birth house will go ahead as planned, starting on Oct 2, Austria’s Interior Ministry said on Monday, after a documentary aired new claims about the late Nazi dictator’s wishes for it.
Following years of legal wrangling, the government decided to turn the house in the northern Austrian town of Braunau, where Hitler was born in 1889, into a police station with a human rights training centre.
In a bid to prevent the building on the border with Germany from becoming a neo-Nazi shrine, the government took control of the dilapidated building in 2016.
The expropriation ended a bitter saga between the state and the former owner.
“The construction (to convert the house) is scheduled to start on Oct 2, 2023,” an Interior Ministry spokesman confirmed to AFP.
“Everything will go ahead as planned,” he added.
But Austrian director Gunter Schwaiger, who is due to release a documentary about the house in late August, said the ministry’s plans for the house’s future use will “always be suspected” of being “in line with the dictator’s wishes”.
As evidence, Mr Schwaiger cited the discovery of a local newspaper article from May 10, 1939, which stated that it was Hitler’s wish to have his birth house converted into offices for the district authorities.
Transforming the house into a police station would amount to the administrative use the dictator had envisaged all along, the director said at a press conference on Monday, calling on the government to rethink its plans.
The controversial redesign of the 800 sq m corner house is currently estimated to cost some €20 million (S$29.6 million) and expected to be completed by 2025.
The police station is to become operational by 2026.
Although Hitler spent only a short time at the property, it has continued to draw Nazi sympathisers from around the world.
Germany annexed Austria in 1938, and although many top henchmen from Hitler downwards were Austrians, historians say the small Alpine country was slow to acknowledge for many years its shared responsibility for the Holocaust and the other crimes of the Nazis before and during World War II. AFP


