Former Consulate General Building In 1882, the larger one of the two houses was built, and in 1893 the smaller building was finished by architect
Martin Haller, who also designed the
Hamburg Rathaus. From 1933 until 1945 the
Nazi Party used the houses as Hamburg headquarters. Since threats against American embassies,
9/11, and a direct threat against the consulate in Hamburg, the security of the U.S. Consulate General in Hamburg was often strengthened. On 1 April 2009, the
Hamburger Morgenpost included the consulate in a satirical
April Fools' Day news report, claiming that because of security reasons the consulate would move to a WW II shelter at
Heiligengeistfeld. In the late 1990s portions of what used to be a larger property belonging to and surrounding the Consulate were sold off to raise needed cash for the U.S. Embassy in Berlin. The Consulate was known for placing a large Christmas tree every year on the balcony over the entrance. The artificial lake
Außenalster is in front of the former American consulate in the
Rotherbaum quarter. The railway station
Dammtor is nearby to the South. In 2024, the U.S. government sold the building to Deutsche Realbesitz Unternehmensgruppe (DERAG), which intends to turn the building into a hotel.
Current Consulate General Facilities In July 2022, the U.S. Consulate General moved its operations to leased office space in the Amundsen Hall building of the Hanseatic Trade Center, at Kehrwieder 8. ==References==