Germany is planning to spend 92 million dollars on the restoration of Nuremberg rallying grounds from where the Nazi leader, Adolf Hitler, gave most of his hate speeches.
The "Zeppelin Tribune", the stage of Hitler in Nazi rallying ground, in the Nuremberg city is still visited by more than 200,000 tourists a year and the city government is planning to turn it into a historical learning site, CNN reports.
According to the report, Hitler's Bunker and the Gestapo headquarters in Berlin are other important stops on the tourist circuit in Germany.
Hitler's Bavarian mountain retreat, the Eagle's Nest, will also receive 22.5 million dollars upgrade to improve its historical information center, the report added.
The Nuremberg grounds, including 24 towers and an imposing, stepped stage, was designed by the Nazi party's house architect, Albert Speer, but never got completed.
Earlier, the Nuremberg ground was left to disintegrate since World War II.
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The restoration plans are suspected to raise controversy over preserving sites associated with the murderous National Socialist regime.
Nuremberg's mayor, Ulrich Maly, said that the 11-square-kilometer ex-National Socialist site demolition would provoke international outrage. So they have decided to renovate the complex, but this does not mean that they were sprucing it up.
The renovation will also preserve the postwar graffiti left by allied soldiers, the report added.