That’s largely because the whole promenade was extensively reconstructed in the 1980s, to bring it up to modern standards of defence against the sea. Right after the war, of course, as many signs as possible of the German occupation were quickly removed already.
Still, one bit of war history is still very apparent if you just follow the promenade in the direction of the wartime photo:
That’s a German bunker, with a wind organ (pipes that make noise when the wind blows through them) installed on top. The bunker normally has a very prominent ZIMMER FREI painted on it — German for “Room to let”, as in for tourists to stay in — in but the local council removes that every so often. And then somebody soon paints it back on :smiling3: (I read the story behind how that came to be painted on originally a while ago. Apparently, an Italian living in Vlissingen did it in the early 1980s because his father had been a forced labourer in the area during the war, and had been mistreated quite badly by the Germans. In a pub, the son said he would like to paint something on the bunker as a form of revenge, and the pub owner said that if he did, he would get a free beer. So one day he bought a tin of paint and a big brush, and late at night, went to the bunker to paint ZIMMER FREI on it.)