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2 weeks’ free accommodation offered by German city in bid to attract new residents

Successful applicants can spend two weeks in a furnished flat in Eisenhüttenstadt, some 100km southeast of Berlin, in September

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The current population in Eisenhüttenstadt in eastern Germany, near the border with Poland, has declined to some 24,000 in recent years, from around 50,000 in 1990. Photo: Getty Images
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An eastern German city is offering two weeks of free lodgings in a bid to attract new residents as it continues to grapple with depopulation some 35 years after reunification.

Successful applicants will be eligible to spend two weeks in a furnished flat in Eisenhüttenstadt, some 100km (62 miles) southeast of Berlin, from September 6-20, the city administration said.

Like many other regions in the former communist East Germany, Eisenhüttenstadt has seen a sharp population decline in the decades after German reunification, with younger people in particular moving away to look for work elsewhere.

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City official Julia Basan noted that the current population has declined to some 24,000 in recent years, from around 50,000 in 1990.

Eisenhüttenstadt was initially designed for a population of 30,000. Photo: Getty Images
Eisenhüttenstadt was initially designed for a population of 30,000. Photo: Getty Images

Located on Germany’s eastern edge on the border with Poland, Eisenhüttenstadt was founded in 1950 to provide accommodation for workers at a newly established steelworks.

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