Abstract
Land reform drastically worsened the existing shortage of residences
in the countryside; at first, there were only about 16,000 housing units
available for the 210,000 “new farmers” to whom land had been allocated.
Since the few new building projects hardly made a dent in this shortage,
the Soviet Military Administration (SMAD) issued Order No. 209 of
September 9, 1947, which called for an ambitious building program:
101,800 new apartment houses were to be built between 1948 and 1950. In
the end, however, only 68 percent of the planned units for the year were
built in 1948 (including remodeled or expanded units); 57 percent in
1949, and 39 percent in 1950.
At the same time, Order No. 209 also
made it possible to demolish estates, supposedly in order to use
salvaged building materials for new farmhouses. In actuality, the
political motive behind all of this was to destroy the estates, which
symbolized Junker domination. According to statistics provided by the
Association for Mutual Farmers Assistance
[Vereinigung der gegenseitigen
Bauernhilfe or VdgB], by September 1948, about 720 residential
buildings and over 6,700 farm buildings had been demolished in the
Soviet occupation zone.
Here, we see the demolition of the barn and
storehouse at the Hesserode Estate in Thuringia; the former manor house
was however being used as a school.