Site overview

The Fosse n° 1 – 1 bis – 1 ter des mines de Liévin is a former coal colliery of the Compagnie des mines de Liévin in the Nord-Pas-de-Calais coalfield, situated in the town of Liévin. The puits n° 1 was begun on 13 December 1858 and began producing coal in 1860. A second shaft, the puits n° 5, later renamed puits n° 1 bis, was sunk from May 1874 to supplement extraction and improve ventilation in firedamp-prone workings; a ventilation shaft, the puits n° 1 ter, followed in 1875 or 1901.

A railway link to Lens station was established in 1867. All surface installations were destroyed during the First World War. Reconstruction began in 1922, and the replacement trellised-lattice headframe for the puits n° 1 bis was built between 1922 and 1923.

The fosse ceased extraction in 1955 after being concentrated on the fosse n° 6 – 6 bis at Angres. The puits n° 1 was backfilled in 1966 and its headframe demolished in 1977; the puits nos 1 bis and 1 ter were backfilled in 1979. The headframe of the puits n° 1 bis survived and was inscribed as a monument historique on 25 November 2009 and listed as UNESCO World Heritage site n° 71 on 30 June 2012.

A full restoration of the headframe began in December 2023 and was celebrated at the Sainte-Barbe festivities of December 2025.

The headframe stands within dense urban surroundings at Liévin, where later development presses closely around the site and the structure reads as an isolated remnant.

Map & photo

Fosse n° 1–1 bis–1 ter de Liévin mine headframe or winding tower site
Photograph taken: 16 November 2025
Map markers and directions links are provided for location reference only and do not indicate public access or permission to enter a site.

History

The Compagnie des mines de Liévin was constituted on 1 December 1862, though sinking of the first shaft had already begun in December 1858. Various preliminary borings were carried out at Liévin from March 1858 onwards; the sondage n° 55, begun in June 1858, encountered coal at a depth of 134.70 metres after passing through a few metres of Devonian blue schist. The puits n° 1 was begun on 13 December 1858, 680 metres north-west of the village church and 100 metres east of the road from Souchez to Point-à-Vendin.

The shaft was lined in oak and equipped with steam engines of 20 and 120 horsepower. The fosse began producing in 1860, though output remained modest — limited to approximately 20,000 tonnes per year until 1866 — increasing significantly after the shaft was deepened. Production rose from 67,761 tonnes in 1869 to 146,787 tonnes in 1873, and reached 285,331 tonnes by 1879 and 350,000 tonnes by 1880.

In May 1874 a second shaft, originally numbered n° 5, was begun using the Kind-Chaudron system, situated 45 metres to the west-south-west of the puits n° 1. It was later renumbered puits n° 1 bis. Its useful diameter was 3.65 metres and its shaft mouth stood at an altitude of 52.34 metres; it was lined in cast iron from 9.50 metres to 93.30 metres.

This shaft was equipped with powerful extraction machinery, and in 1875 compressed-air mechanical haulage was introduced simultaneously with mechanical boring. The workings were firedamp-prone: the puits n° 1 bis was sunk partly to improve ventilation and safety. A ventilation shaft, the puits n° 1 ter, was opened from 1875 or 1901, 66 metres to the south-east of the puits n° 1.

In 1867 the fosse was connected to the Lens station by railway, which boosted output considerably. A grisou accident killed 28 miners in 1885. The fosse was entirely destroyed during the First World War; all surface installations were razed.

Reconstruction began in 1922, and the replacement headframe for the puits n° 1 bis was constructed between 1922 and 1923. This headframe is of the type described as avant-carré porteur, built from riveted trellised-lattice girders. It replaced the earlier headframe which had been destroyed in the conflict.

Workers' cités were also rebuilt and enlarged during this period. In 1946 the Compagnie des mines de Liévin was nationalised and integrated into the Groupe de Liévin. In 1952 the Groupe de Liévin merged with the Groupe de Lens to form the Groupe de Lens-Liévin.

The puits nos 1, 1 bis and 1 ter then served respectively for extraction, service and ventilation. A firedamp drainage station was installed in 1959, and the extracted gas was sent to the Liévin works. The fosse was concentrated on the fosse n° 6 – 6 bis at Angres, 2,320 metres to the south-south-west, and ceased extraction in 1955; thereafter the puits n° 1 bis served as intake air while the puits n° 1 ter provided return air for the fosse n° 3 – 3 bis des mines de Lens, 478 metres to the north-east.

The puits n° 1, 670 metres deep, was backfilled in 1966 and its headframe demolished in 1977. The puits nos 1 bis and 1 ter, respectively 796 and 648 metres deep, were backfilled in 1979. All remaining installations, except the headframe of the puits n° 1 bis, were subsequently destroyed; a shopping centre was installed on the former pit-head site.

The puits n° 1 ter had carried no headframe since the Second World War. Charbonnages de France materialised the pit-head markers for puits nos 1, 1 bis and 1 ter in the early twenty-first century; the BRGM conducts annual inspections. The headframe of the puits n° 1 bis, in its entirety, was inscribed as a monument historique on 25 November 2009.

It was listed on 30 June 2012 as part of the UNESCO World Heritage inscription of the Bassin minier du Nord-Pas-de-Calais, constituting site n° 71. The city of Liévin became the owner of the headframe in 1989 following the cessation of works by the Houillères. The headframe had been repainted blue in 1999.

In December 2023 a full rehabilitation project began, designed by the architecture firm Agence Florian Valeri, with a total budget of 1.8 million euros, of which 1.4 million euros came from institutional grants. Works included sand-blasting, repair of corrosion damage, application of three protective coats of paint, and the installation of a public forecourt with reflective surfaces and trees evoking the former recette building. The headframe was repainted in its original kaki green.

The restoration was celebrated with an illumination ceremony at the Sainte-Barbe festivities in December 2025.

Timeline

1858
Construction

Puits n° 1 begun by Compagnie des mines de Liévin

The puits n° 1 was begun on 13 December 1858 at Liévin, 680 metres north-west of the village church. Preliminary borings had identified coal at approximately 134.70 metres depth. The shaft was lined in oak and equipped with steam engines.
1860
Operation

Coal production begins

The fosse n° 1 began producing coal in 1860, though output remained modest at around 20,000 tonnes per year until 1866. Production increased significantly after shaft deepening.
1862
Legislation

Compagnie des mines de Liévin formally constituted

The Compagnie des mines de Liévin was formally constituted on 1 December 1862.
1867
Construction

Railway connection to Lens station established

The fosse was connected to the gare de Lens by railway in 1867, which supported increased output.
1874
Construction

Puits n° 5 (later n° 1 bis) begun

Sinking of the puits n° 5, later renumbered n° 1 bis, began in May 1874 using the Kind-Chaudron process, 45 metres to the west-south-west of the puits n° 1. The shaft had a useful diameter of 3.65 metres and was lined in cast iron from 9.50 to 93.30 metres. It was equipped with powerful extraction machinery.
1875
Construction

Compressed-air mechanical haulage and ventilation shaft added

In 1875, compressed-air mechanical haulage was introduced into the workings. A ventilation shaft, the puits n° 1 ter, was opened; sources give the date as 1875 or 1901.
1880
Operation

Production reaches 350,000 tonnes

Annual output at the fosse n° 1 reached 350,000 tonnes by 1880.
1885
Operation

Grisou accident kills 28 miners

A firedamp explosion in 1885 killed 28 miners at the fosse n° 1.
1914–1918
Closure

All surface installations destroyed during First World War

The surface installations of the fosse n° 1 – 1 bis – 1 ter were entirely destroyed during the First World War.
1922–1923
Construction

Fosse rebuilt; new trellised-lattice headframe constructed for puits n° 1 bis

Reconstruction of the fosse commenced in 1922. The replacement headframe for the puits n° 1 bis, of type avant-carré porteur with riveted trellised-lattice girders, was built between 1922 and 1923. Workers' cités were also rebuilt and enlarged.
1946
Legislation

Compagnie des mines de Liévin nationalised; integration into Groupe de Liévin

The Compagnie des mines de Liévin was nationalised in 1946 and integrated into the Groupe de Liévin.
1952
Legislation

Groupe de Liévin merges with Groupe de Lens

The Groupe de Liévin merged with the Groupe de Lens in 1952 to form the Groupe de Lens-Liévin.
1955
Closure

Extraction ceases; fosse concentrated on fosse n° 6 – 6 bis

The fosse n° 1 – 1 bis – 1 ter ceased extraction in 1955, being concentrated on the fosse n° 6 – 6 bis at Angres, 2,320 metres to the south-south-west. The puits n° 1 bis thereafter served as intake air and the puits n° 1 ter as return air.
1959
Construction

Firedamp drainage station installed

A firedamp drainage station was installed in 1959; the extracted gas was sent to the Liévin industrial works.
1966
Closure

Puits n° 1 backfilled

The puits n° 1, 670 metres deep, was backfilled in 1966.
1977
Closure

Headframe of puits n° 1 demolished

The headframe of the puits n° 1 was demolished in 1977.
1979
Redevelopment

Puits nos 1 bis and 1 ter backfilled; remaining installations demolished

The puits nos 1 bis and 1 ter, respectively 796 and 648 metres deep, were backfilled in 1979. All remaining surface installations, except the headframe of the puits n° 1 bis, were subsequently destroyed. A shopping centre was installed on the former pit-head site.
1989
Heritage

Headframe transferred to ownership of the Ville de Liévin

The Ville de Liévin became the owner of the headframe of the puits n° 1 bis in 1989 following the cessation of works by the Houillères.
2009
Heritage

Headframe inscribed as monument historique

The headframe of the puits n° 1 bis, in its entirety, was inscribed as a monument historique by arrêté on 25 November 2009.
2012
Heritage

Listed as UNESCO World Heritage site (site n° 71)

On 30 June 2012, the headframe of the puits n° 1 bis was listed as part of the Bassin minier du Nord-Pas-de-Calais UNESCO World Heritage inscription, constituting site n° 71.
2023–2025
Heritage

Full restoration of headframe completed

A full rehabilitation project, designed by Agence Florian Valeri, began in December 2023, with a total budget of 1.8 million euros, of which 1.4 million euros came from institutional grants. Works included sand-blasting, corrosion repair, three protective coats of paint in the original kaki green, and creation of a public forecourt. The restoration was celebrated with an illumination ceremony at the Sainte-Barbe festivities in December 2025.

Sources and records

Wikipedia article (French): Fosse no 1 – 1 bis – 1 ter des mines de Liévin
Wikipedia article (French): Chevalement du puits no 1 bis de la fosse no 1 – 1 bis – 1 ter des mines de Liévin
Wikipedia article (French): Compagnie des mines de Liévin
Plateforme ouverte du patrimoine / Mérimée database: PA62000094
Monumentum heritage database: PA62000094
Ville de Liévin official website: heritage pages and headframe restoration news
Région Hauts-de-France: article on restoration of chevalement 1 bis
Lillomusées / Université de Lille: article on restoration of chevalement n° 1 bis
Bassin minier Nord-Pas-de-Calais Patrimoine mondial website: article on headframe restoration
Gaillette.fr: UNESCO Liévin heritage summary
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