The Vf MG-Pilz is a German military bunker located in northern France, near the coast of the English Channel. Built during World War II as part of the Atlantic Wall fortifications, this structure represents the extensive defensive network constructed by Nazi Germany along the French coastline. The bunker's name follows German military nomenclature, with 'MG-Pilz' indicating it was designed for machine gun emplacement in a mushroom-shaped configuration.
The bunker is situated in the Pas-de-Calais department, an area that saw intense military activity during both World Wars due to its strategic location facing Britain. The region around this bunker contains numerous other fortifications from the same period, forming part of the extensive Atlantic Wall system that stretched from Norway to the Spanish border. Today, this bunker stands as a historical monument to the military engineering and defensive strategies employed during the 1940s.