Embassy of the United Kingdom in Berlin

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The new British embassy building
The new British embassy building

The British embassy in Berlin (German: Britische Botschaft in Berlin) is the embassy of the United Kingdom in Germany. It is located on 70-71 Wilhelmstraße, near the Hotel Adlon. The current ambassador is Peter Torry KCMG.[1]

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[edit] Palais Strousberg

Main article: Palais Strousberg
The Palais Strousberg later to become the old British embassy building
The Palais Strousberg later to become the old British embassy building

The original building at 70 Wilhelmstraße, known as the Palais Strousberg and designed by August Orth, was built in 1868 by the railway magnate Bethel Henry Strousberg. In December 1884 the United Kingdom bought the site after renting it for some years after Strousberg's bankruptcy and the subsequent sale of the building to Hugo zu Hohenlohe-Öhringen in 1876.[2] Wilhelmstraße was then a centre for the German government, being the location of the Imperial Chancellery and the Foreign Ministry.

When diplomatic relations were broken off at the outbreak of World War I the building stood empty. Surviving a fire during the upheavals of the 1919 revolution, it was reoccupied in 1920 when Edgar Vincent d'Abernon became Ambassador.[2] At the beginning of World War II relations were broken off again. The building was heavily damaged by Allied bombing during the war and was demolished in 1950. The title to the land nevertheless remained in the possession of the British state. Between 1949 and 1991 the British Ambassador to the German Federal Republic was based in Bonn, as Bonn was the capital city of West Germany until German reunification. There was also a British embassy to the German Democratic Republic which was situated nearby on Unter den Linden.

[edit] The new British embassy

Coat of arms
Coat of arms

Upon reunification, the German government decided to relocate the seat of Government from Bonn to Berlin in 1991. Accordingly, the British government decided to reoccupy the Wilhelmstraße site, despite the German Foreign Office no longer being located in this street. An architectural competition was held, and won by the practice of Michael Wilford and Partner (see also Manuel Schupp). Ground was broken at the site on 29 June 1998 by Derek Fatchett MP, and the new building opened by Queen Elizabeth II on 18 July 2000.

[edit] Architecture

The British embassy is the first, and to date, only embassy in Germany to be built under a Private Finance Initiative. Arteos, a Bilfinger Berger owned special purpose entity, financed and were to operate the embassy building for 30 years. A further 30 year extension is possible, following which the building will revert to British government ownership. In December 2006 Bilfinger sold their interest in the embassy to the UK firm Secondary Market Infrastructure Fund'.[3]

Conscious of the necessity for modern embassies to forge good and open relationships with the German public, Wilford endowed the main floor with a café, library and restaurant. The security zone used to begin on the fourth floor but, with the increased risk from terrorists, the site is now totally secure, and the intended public spaces are no longer freely accessible.

[edit] References

  1. ^ British embassy Berlin. Retrieved on 2006-09-01.
  2. ^ a b British embassy Berlin - More information. Retrieved on 2006-09-01.
  3. ^ Bilfinger sells embassy interest to UK investor (English). The London Independent. Retrieved on 2007-03-22.

This article contains material that was originally translated from the German Wikipedia article Britische Botshaft in Berlin. That article contains the following references:-

  • Thomas Michael Krüger, Florian Bolk: Britische Botschaft Berlin. Broschüre (32 Pages), ISBN 3-933743-36-2
  • Ulf Meyer: Bundeshauptstadt Berlin, jovis Verlag, Berlin, 1999, ISBN 3-931321-98-3

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 52°30′57″N, 13°22′51″E

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