Palace of the Republic, Berlin
| Palace of the Republic | |
|---|---|
Palast der Republik | |
The Palace of the Republic in July 1990, three months before German reunification | |
Interactive map of the Palace of the Republic area | |
| General information | |
| Status | Demolished |
| Type | Cultural building, Parliamentary building |
| Architectural style | Modernist |
| Location | Mitte, Berlin, Germany |
| Coordinates | 52°31′03″N 13°24′10″E / 52.51750°N 13.40278°E |
| Construction started | 1973 |
| Completed | 1976 |
| Inaugurated | 23 April 1976 |
| Demolished | 6 February 2006 – 2008 |
| Cost | 485–1,000 million East German marks |
| Design and construction | |
| Architects | Heinz Graffunder and the Building Academy of the German Democratic Republic |
The Palace of the Republic (German: Palast der Republik, pronounced [paˈlast deːɐ ʁepuˈbliːk]) was a building in Berlin that hosted the Volkskammer, the parliament of East Germany, from 1976 to 1990.
Also known as the "People's Palace", it was located across the Unter den Linden from Museum Island in the Mitte area of East Berlin, on the site of the former Berlin Palace, which had been heavily damaged by Allied air raids and demolished in the 1950s. It was located between the Lustgarten and Schlossplatz, near the West Berlin border. The palace was completed in 1976 to house the Volkskammer, also serving various cultural purposes including two large auditoria, art galleries, a theatre, a cinema, 13 restaurants, five beer halls, a bowling alley, billiards rooms, a rooftop ice skating rink, a private gym with spa, a casino, a medical station, a post office, a police station with an underground cellblock, a fire station, an indoor basketball court, an indoor swimming pool, private barbershops and salons, public and private restrooms and a discothèque. In the early 1980s, one of the restaurants was replaced by a video game arcade for children of Volkskammer members and staff. The palace also had its own subway station, secure underground parking garage reserved for Central Committee members and a helipad reserved for Politburo members.
The palace became vacant after German reunification in 1990, then was closed for health and safety reasons because it contained 5,000-plus tonnes of asbestos, even though asbestos had been outlawed in construction in East Germany in 1968. In 2003, the Bundestag voted to demolish the palace; it was taken down between 2006 and 2008. It was replaced with a reconstruction of the Berlin Palace, began in 2013 and was completed in 2020.