German authorities are bringing back local lockdown measures after an outbreak linked to a meatpacking plant.
More than 1,300 employees of the Tönnies meatpacking plant have now tested positive for the virus.
North Rhine-Westphalia state premier Armin Laschet said restrictions will return in the Gütersloh district, home to about 360,000 people.
It is the first return of containment measures since Germany began lifting its lockdown in May.
Mr Laschet said the lockdown would last until 30 June, and described the move as a “preventative measure”.
Germany was widely praised for its response to the pandemic but there are concerns infections are rising again.
Lothar Wieler, head of the nation’s public health body the Robert Koch Institute (RKI), told reporters on Tuesday the country was at risk of a second wave of infections but said he was optimistic they could prevent it.
Currently the reproduction rate – the R number which indicates how many people one infected person can pass the virus to – in Germany is estimated at 2.76.
But authorities have stressed the outbreaks remain localised.
The R number must be below one for infection rates to fall.