A bunker from WWII seen at the Wolf's Lair complex in the Srokowo a sensational article published by the BBC that the management of the Wolf's Lair was planning to build an amusement park at the headquarters of Adolf Hitler, which could change into a "Nazi theme park", this information was immediately denied. Authorities claimed, it's alongside renovations, which will see the run down buildings restored as well as the addition of a restaurants and entrance building, also new walking paths are planned to be build. The Wolf's Lair (German: Wolfsschanze; Polish: Wilczy Szaniec) was


A bunker from WWII seen at the Wolf's Lair complex in the Srokowo a sensational article published by the BBC that the management of the Wolf's Lair was planning to build an amusement park at the headquarters of Adolf Hitler, which could change into a "Nazi theme park", this information was immediately denied. Authorities claimed, it's alongside renovations, which will see the run down buildings restored as well as the addition of a restaurants and entrance building, also new walking paths are planned to be build. The Wolf's Lair (German: Wolfsschanze; Polish: Wilczy Szaniec) was Adolf Hitler's first Eastern Front military headquarters in World War II. Three security zones surrounded the central complex where the Fuhrer's bunker was located. In total, Hitler spent more than 800 days in Wolf's Lair until his final departure on 20 November 1944. Many of the buildings were destroyed in 1944, shortly before the Red Army descended. On July 20 in 1944, a man named Claus von Stauffenberg, a German army officer, deployed a bomb in a briefcase during a military conference, which was intended to kill the dictator. The bomb only killed four men, with Hitler surviving.


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Keywords: adolf, bunker, complex, construction, forest, fuhrer, historical, history, hitler, ii, lair, nazi, renovation, ruins, szaniec, war, wilczy, wolfs, wolfslair, wolfsschanze, world, wwii