In the last years of the nineteenth century the population of Berlin was
expanding rapidly. The attendant issues of housing large numbers of
people in cramped conditions were not far behind. By 1898 the German
National Insurance Institute had a sanatorium built for the victims of
tuberculosis.
Beelitz-Heilstätten (or the
Beelitz Sanitorium)
steadily grew and functioned for many decades, playing host to a number
of infamous patients, including Adolf Hitler. Yet most of it is now
abandoned.
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