Politics

For Anti -Terrorist Protection: Squad columns (photos) are erected around the German Bundestag (photo)

According to the media, by the end of 2023, a new land metro line (S-Bahn 21) will be laid in front of the Parliament building in Berlin. Large -scale construction works have launched around the Berlin Center in Berlin's center. About it reports the German edition of Bild. The building itself is rebuilt for visitors, and around the Shaydenmannstrasse from the Brandenburg Gate for anti -terrorist purposes erect protective columns, which will be 81.

According to the Bundestag representatives, the total cost of work is 4. 5 million euros. In addition, a new information center and cooling point of technological processes will be built. "The new center will start building no earlier than 2025, the works will cost 150-250 million euros," the statement emphasizes. However, earthworks have begun from the facade of the German Parliament.

According to the project, the Bundestag guests will get to him through the Info Center, and then they will reach an underground transition of 145 meters long with escalators. "The historical parade stairs of the nineteenth century will become inaccessible to visitors," Bild notes. Also, by the end of 2023, a new land subway (S-Bahn 21) will be laid before the Bundestag, which will connect the central station and the Potsdam Square. "77 Tirgarten trees are cut down as part of the work.

Instead, seedlings will be planted elsewhere, and 13 birdhouses will be built for birds," the newspaper reports. The building was built in 1894 for the Reichstag of the German Empire and reconstructed in the 1990s for the German Parliament. It is built on the project of the Frankfurt architect Paul Wallot in the style of Italian High Renaissance. The first stone in the foundation of the German Parliament was laid on June 9, 1884, Kaiser Wilhelm I.

The construction lasted ten years and ended with Kaiser Wilhelm II. Construction work cost 24 million Reichsmarks from France's contribution after the Franco-Prussian War. During the Second World War, the Reichstag angular towers were converted into anti -aircraft towers. During the war, almost all the windows were imprisoned, and the building served as a bomb. The AEG electricity company produced electronic lamps in it.

In addition, a hospital was equipped in the parliament building, and the maternity ward of the famous Sharyite clinic moved to its basement. On October 4, 1990, the next day after the actual date of the unification of Germany, the first meeting of the first All -German Bundestag was held in the Reichstasis. On June 20, 1991, the Bundestag in Bonn 338 votes against 320 made a decision to move to Berlin to the Reichstag building. The building is the most visited parliament in the world.