FORTE CULTURA Station: Government Bunker (DE)

Bundesbank bunker in Cochem

German currency history during the Cold War

For decades, one of the best-kept secrets of the Federal Republic of Germany was the former secret bunker of the German Bundesbank in Cochem. Located in the centre of an idyllic residential area, the facility was perfectly camouflaged and built to survive a nuclear war.

The purpose of the facility was to store a secret emergency currency totalling 15 billion DM during the Cold War. From 1964 to 1988, the bunker was subject to the strictest secrecy. Although it was known that there was a bunker facility here, absolute silence was maintained about its use. As a relic of the Cold War, the listed underground vault and bunker complex is unique in Europe.

The above-ground part of the facility on an 8700 square metre site in a residential area was camouflaged as a training and recreation centre for the Deutsche Bundesbank. The bunker complex with a length of 300 metres and an area of 1500 square metres consists of the above-ground site with two large camouflaged residential buildings and the underground bunker and vault system. In addition to the underground vault, it also includes supply and communication areas and was designed to provide 175 people with secure supplies for 14 days in the event of a nuclear attack.

Following extensive restoration work, the Bundesbank bunker in Cochem has been open to the public as a documentation centre since 2016 and is open to the public on guided tours.
Here, visitors can immerse themselves in the history of the secret nuclear bunker and experience the exciting underworld of this former billion-dollar empire. The bunker documents a special chapter in German monetary history and the history of the Federal Republic of Germany during the Cold War, making it both a public memorial and a monument to peace.

The former camouflage houses, built as residential buildings, are now home to the „Vintage“ hotel, which reflects the spirit of the 60s with an interesting interior.


The Bundesbank bunker in Cochem was a nuclear-safe Government bunker of the Cold War with camouflage houses.

Bunker facility with vaults

After passing through heavy steel doors, you enter the secret deep bunker via the dead straight, approx. 100 metre long access tunnel.

The vault, whose walls are 4 metres thick in places, is particularly secure as the core of the bunker complex. The door to the vault weighs 8 tonnes. Behind it, the Bundesbank stored 15 billion Deutschmarks in boxes and sacks as so-called emergency currency for over 20 years in the strictest secrecy. This facility was secured by countless sensors in the walls.

Supply systems

The bunker facility was designed to be self-sufficient, so that 175 people could be safely supplied for 14 days in the event of a nuclear attack. The bunker includes:

  • equipped kitchen and a sanitary room/toilets
  • Decontamination sluice with showers, storage of radiation protection suits
  • Infirmary and mortuary
  • several diesel generators (now removed) and a transformer station for the power supply,
    plus 18 tanks, each with a capacity of 1,000 litres of diesel fuel,
  • Ventilation systems with sand filters for the supply of breathing air
  • a cooling tower, which also served as an emergency exit
  • own drinking water supply via a deep well,
  • Sleeping and working areas for 85 bunker employees and a maximum of 90 other people
  • a correspondingly large dining room

Communication systems from the 60s

The bunker was equipped with a warning centre and a communication system with teleprinters and a telephone system to maintain communication with the outside world as far as possible after a nuclear attack.

Camouflage houses

The so-called camouflage houses, a luxurious semi-detached house with a garage extension, swimming pool and large garden, were acquired by the Bundesbank in the early 1960s and used as a training and recreation centre for Bundesbank employees. This use served as camouflage for the bunker and was maintained until 1993.

One of the two entrances to the bunker complex is located in the basement of the building. From the hotel's garden, you can reach what is now the main entrance to the Bundesbank bunker.

Today, the ***Superior Hotel Vintage is located in these buildings, whose façades are listed due to their history and which have been completely remodelled inside. The interior design of the hotel is reminiscent of the sixties with loving details. Spend the night in the stylish camouflage buildings of the Bundesbank bunker.

BUNDESBANK BUNKER - Guided tours

OPENING HOURS SUMMER
01.04. - 30.06.: Guided tours daily 11:00, 12:00, 13:00, 14:00 and 15:00
01.07. - 01.11.: Guided tours daily 10:00, 11:00, 12:00, 13:00, 14:00 and 15:00

The Bundesbank bunker can only be visited as part of a guided tour.

Warm clothing is necessary as the temperature is 12°Celsius all year round.

OPENING HOURS WINTER 2022/23
Different opening times: further information at www.bundesbank-bunker.de

PRICES
Individual visitors: Adults: 11€, children (10-17 years) 6€, family ticket (2 adults and up to 5 children) 28€.
Group price: minimum flat rate group tour (up to 12 people) €132, groups of 13 people or more €10.50 p.p.

Bunker plan © Bundesbank Bunker Cochem

History of the Bundesbank Bunker Cochem

From 1964 to 1988, the bunker was used by the Bundesbank to store the BBk II replacement series. This use was abandoned in 1988 and all the stored money, which was never needed, was shredded. The bunker then stood empty. In 1994, Cochemer Volksbank bought the bunker and set up lockers in one part for flood-proof storage of its customers' money. This use was also abandoned and in 2014 an entrepreneurial couple from the neighbouring village bought the facility and, after extensive restoration, turned it into a museum. The two camouflage houses (used for training purposes for Bundesbank employees until 1993) were converted into a hotel while preserving the listed façade. The interior design is reminiscent of the sixties with loving details. In the basement of the hotel is an entrance to the bunker complex, which is now closed to guests.

Architecture of the Bundesbank Bunker Cochem

Hochtief AG used approx. 3000 m³ of concrete in the 2 years of construction of the bunker facility from 1962-1964. The facility was built into the rock and approximately 30 metres underground.
The bunker, with concrete walls up to four metres thick in places, was given various entrances:

  • in the basement of the residential building at Brauseleystrasse 7,
  • behind the residential buildings (accessible from the street „Am Wald“),
  • Emergency exit in the cooling structure for air dehumidification
  • Emergency exit in the ventilation structure

On the one hundred metre long corridor from the cellar of the residential building towards the main gallery (it was also the accommodation for 90 civilians), there is an exit on the left that leads to one of two safe areas. Mesh boxes were installed in a 140 square metre room, secured by a steel door with a combination lock that was approx. 50 cm thick and weighed several tonnes. The second, even longer vault is located at the end of the 100 metre corridor, also on the left. A staircase leads to the accommodation and work rooms on the upper floor. The supply and recreation rooms and a radio room were located here. Adjacent to the radio room is the so-called cooling tower, including the surrounding staircase. This 14 metre high shaft with a concrete casing more than 2 metres thick was once used to supply the construction site and as an emergency exit.

The security concept of the vault system consisted of vibration sensors being attached to the walls at short intervals, which then activated an alarm system. The facility has been a listed building since 2011 and is recognised as a cultural monument in Rhineland-Palatinate.

The bunker complex is also easily accessible on foot from the town and can be included in wonderful hiking routes around Cochem. The Conder Höhe hiking car park is an ideal starting point for exploring nature and history on an excursion.

The Bundesbank bunker is located in the Brauselay nature reserve. The nature reserve takes its name from the rock that lies around 65 metres above the Moselle. Rare plants such as barberry, boxwood and steppe heather thrive here in the Mediterranean climate. The green lizard, smooth snakes and the endangered Apollo butterfly can also be discovered here.

With its romantic old town, the Reichsburg castle and many other sights, the town of Cochem offers the opportunity to enjoy a holiday or a long weekend with many highlights in combination with a trip on the Moselle and a visit to a cosy winery.
In addition to the Moselsteig Trail and the Cochem Knights' Tour, the Moselle Adventure Route offers many other wonderful hiking and excursion routes with different themes.


Events

Themed tours and cultural events: In addition to the regular guided tours, the Bundesbank Bunker offers special themed tours and cultural events on various dates. The dates of the themed tours are published online around 3 months in advance.


Contact us

Bundesbank Bunker Cochem
Reuter & Reuter GbR

At the forest 35
56812 Cochem-Cond
Telephone: 02671 9153540
e-mail
www.bundesbank-bunker.de

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Tourism partner of the Bundesbank Bunker Cochem


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