Speer’s membership into the Nazi Party on 1 March 1931 as member #474,481 was the indisputable cornerstone of his future success. Joining the Nazi Party because of Hitler’s “magnetic force” and “peculiar magic”, Speer was able to escape the worries of post-depression and gain professional advancement. However, his initial role in the party was minute, extending no further than driving party members to meetings and rallies. However, his luck changed upon acquainting Karl Hanke, who gave him the job of redecorating Goebbel’s headquarters in Voss Strasse. Here, Speer proved his ability to get a job done well in a limited time period. As a result of impressing Nazi party leadership, Speer was appointed Commissioner for the Artistic and Technical Presentation of Party Rallies and Demonstrations, and later head of the Building Department of Deputy Fuhrer. Therefore, as Speer himself states, “this coincidence [was] the luckiest turning point in my [Speer’s] life”.
Furthermore, the close relationship between Speer and Hitler, which was the result of a shared architectural vision, enabled Speer to expand his architectural endeavours. This of course, was cemented upon his appointment as First Architect of the Reich following the death of Hitler’s chief architect, Paul Troost. With this title, Speer was given the opportunity to develop the ‘Germania’ project, which according to Hitler “should also speak to the conscience of a future Germany centuries from now”. Similarly, Speer was also given the opportunity to design the new Reich Chancellery, which would become one of his