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Designed by architect Clemens Klütsch, Prora stretched over 4.5 kilometers and comprised eight identical residential blocks. Although meant for leisure purposes, the site was truthfully an embodiment of the Nazi regime's ambitions, marked by implications of propaganda and control. Following the outbreak of World War II, construction halted, leaving Prora in an incomplete state. After the war, it became a part of the Soviet-controlled East Germany, used primarily as a military installation, until reunification in the 1990s brought the question of its future back into focus.