This was the article printed in my town's paper yesterday. The
Baltimore Sun Newspaper. Thought you'd like to read it:
BERLIN -- A new luxury hotel will open next month on the site of Adolf
Hitler's Alpine retreat, which served as a part-time seat of government
where he and other Nazi leaders often met to plan Germany's assault on
Europe and the Holocaust.
The new hotel, the Intercontinental Resort Berchtesgaden, will open on
the Obersalzberg mountaintop to guests on March 1, the Bavarian Finance
Ministry said Thursday.
The decision to build a hotel on the site above the German Alp town of
Berchtesgaden angered many Jewish groups.
Officials have tried to address their concerns with a documentation
center opened in 1999 to detail the area's Nazi past. In addition, the
state of Bavaria kept ownership of the land and set the condition that
the hotel be designed for affluent tourists -- precautions designed to
help keep out neo-Nazis.
When launching the project in 2001, officials said the hotel would
include 138 rooms -- complete with swimming pools, a health spa and
nearby ski areas -- and would reconnect the site with a 19th-century
tourism tradition.
The site, about 60 miles southeast of Munich, included a number of
buildings and bunkers that were designed as Hitler's Alpine fortress.
Nearby is Kehlstein peak, with a restaurant known as "Eagle's Nest,"
also once used by Hitler. Hitler survived an assassination attempt at a
different retreat, Wolf's Lair, in what is now Poland.
Most of the Obersalzberg buildings were destroyed by Allied bombers in
1945. The U.S. military used the area as a resort after World War II,
before handing it back to Germany in 1996.
Bavarian officials blew up Hitler's guest house in 1952 out of fears it
would become a neo-Nazi shrine.