Site overview

Zeche Holland was a hard coal colliery with shafts in Ückendorf (Gelsenkirchen) and Wattenscheid (now a district of Bochum). The colliery was established in 1855 when Dutch investors founded the Bergbau-Aktiengesellschaft Holland to exploit coalfields in the two communities. Coal winding began at Schacht I in 1860.

The Wattenscheid shafts were sunk progressively from 1873 (Schacht III), 1898 (Schacht IV), 1907 (Schacht V), and 1921 (Schacht VI). Schacht IV became the principal winding shaft at the Wattenscheid installation. The colliery reached its highest annual output of 1.7 million tonnes in 1969.

After an underground connection to Zeche Zollverein was driven in 1973, production at Wattenscheid was halted on 15 January 1974. Schacht IV continued in use as a transport and personnel shaft until the last symbolic coal wagon was brought to surface there on 29 December 1983. The shaft was backfilled in 1988.

The steel headframe over Schacht IV — a Deutsches Strebgerüst originally erected at Zeche Zollverein Schacht IV in 1927 and transferred to Holland in 1962 — survives as a listed industrial monument. It was fully restored between 2018 and 2019 and serves today as a public landmark and event venue.

The headframe stands in settled urban surroundings at Wattenscheid, where it survives as an isolated landmark within a landscape of roads, housing, and later commercial use.

Map

Map markers and directions links are provided for location reference only and do not indicate public access or permission to enter a site.
No site photograph is currently available. Images will be added as field visits are carried out.

History

The origins of the colliery lie in 1855, when Dutch investors — drawn principally from Arnhem — founded the Bergbau-Aktiengesellschaft Holland with the intention of working the coalfields Carl Reinhard, Adelbert, Hain, Anton Ernst, and Wupperthal in the communities of Ückendorf and Wattenscheid. The formal consolidation of these fields under the Holland name followed in 1861. Schacht I at Ückendorf was sunk in late 1856 to a depth of 68 m into the Carboniferous and began winding coal in 1860.

Schacht II was sunk to the same depth in the same year. A railway connection to the Bahnhof Gelsenkirchen of the Cöln-Mindener Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft, constructed jointly with the neighbouring collieries Vereinigte Carolinenglück, Hannover, and Rheinelbe, was brought into service on 12 March 1859; further connections to the Rheinische Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft at Ückendorf (1867) and Wattenscheid (28 November 1876) followed. A coke works incorporating Germany's first by-product recovery plant — for the separation of ammonia and tar — was erected at the Wattenscheid installation in 1882.

In 1897 the colliery passed to the ownership of Zeche Nordstern of Gelsenkirchen, and was incorporated into the Vereinigte Stahlwerke in 1926. At Wattenscheid, Schacht III was sunk in 1873, Schacht IV in 1898, Schacht V in 1907, and Schacht VI in 1921. The pit-head buildings of the Wattenscheid installation received a significant architectural contribution in 1921 with the construction of the baths and administration buildings designed by the architects Fritz Schupp and Martin Kremmer.

These neoclassical brick structures, arranged around a three-winged courtyard, are the earliest known surviving work of those architects, who went on to design the Schachtanlage Zollverein 12 in Essen. A firedamp and coal dust explosion at the Anlage III/IV in September 1915 killed 14 workers. On 31 October 1925 a further firedamp explosion killed 18 workers and injured five; this was the deadliest mine disaster in the history of Wattenscheid.

The colliery was also a site of forced labour during the Second World War, and an inspection report from late 1942 records conditions for Soviet civilian workers at Holland in critical terms. Zeche Bonifacius in Essen was merged with Holland in 1966. The highest coal output ever recorded at the colliery — 1.7 million tonnes — was achieved in 1969, when the workforce numbered approximately 3,000.

In 1973 an underground connection (Durchschlag) was made to Zeche Zollverein, and the two collieries were combined into a Verbundbergwerk. Production in Wattenscheid was halted on 15 January 1974. The open shafts were retained thereafter as transport and ventilation shafts; the coal sales point (Landabsatz) at the site continued to be served even after the cessation of production.

Most surface structures at Holland III/IV/VI were demolished from late 1975. On 29 December 1983 the last symbolic coal wagon was brought to the surface at Schacht IV, marking the formal end of the connected operation. Mine water pumping was halted in 1988 and Schächte IV and VI were backfilled in the same year.

Schacht II had been abandoned in 1958, Schacht I in 1963, and Schacht V in 1935. The 22-hectare site of Schächte III/IV/VI on the Lyrenstraße/Lohrheidestraße was comprehensively remediated between 1991 and 1993 and has since been developed as a mixed area of housing, commercial premises, and open space. The protected Lohnhalle complex was renovated and extended in the framework of the Internationale Bauausstellung Emscher Park; the Lohnhalle itself has operated as an events venue since 1998, with an adjacent technology centre — the Technologie- und Gründerzentrum Wattenscheid — occupying the former office spaces.

The steel headframe over Schacht IV, a Deutsches Strebgerüst originally designed by Schupp and Kremmer and erected in 1927 over Schacht IV of Zeche Zollverein, was transferred to Holland in 1962 and remained after all other structures were demolished. The 'HOLLAND' nameplate on the headframe was taken from the demolished frame over Schacht VI. In 2011 the headframe was acquired by the Entwicklungsgesellschaft Ruhr (now WirtschaftsEntwicklungsGesellschaft Bochum).

Full structural restoration, costing approximately 2.8 million euros funded through urban development grants and institutional contributions, took place between 2018 and mid-2019. The adjacent machine hall was demolished in January 2015 as part of the same programme. Following completion of the restoration, the surrounding open space was redesigned as a public square, with works completed in June 2021.

A café and social venue, the Kumpeltreff, opened at the site in October 2021. Guided tours to the summit of the headframe, comprising 212 steps, are offered by Bochum Marketing. The headframe is one of ten surviving winding frames in Bochum and is a recognised element of the Route der Industriekultur.

Timeline

1855
Legislation

Foundation of Bergbau-Aktiengesellschaft Holland

Dutch investors, principally from Arnhem, founded the Bergbau-Aktiengesellschaft Holland in 1855 to exploit the coalfields Carl Reinhard, Adelbert, Hain, Anton Ernst, and Wupperthal in Ückendorf and Wattenscheid.
1856
Construction

Sinking of Schacht I and Schacht II at Ückendorf

Schacht I was sunk in late 1856 to 68 m depth into the Carboniferous. Schacht II was sunk to the same depth in the same year.
1860
Operation

Coal winding begins at Schacht I

Coal winding commenced at Schacht I in Ückendorf in 1860.
1861
Legislation

Formal consolidation of fields under the Holland name

The coalfields were formally consolidated under the Holland name in 1861.
1873
Construction

Sinking of Schacht III at Wattenscheid

Schacht III was sunk at Wattenscheid in 1873, beginning the development of the second main shaft installation of the colliery.
1882
Construction

Coke works with first by-product recovery plant in Germany erected

A coke works incorporating the first by-product recovery plant in Germany — for the separation of ammonia and tar — was erected at the Wattenscheid installation in 1882.
1897
Legislation

Colliery acquired by Zeche Nordstern

In 1897 Holland passed into the ownership of Gelsenkirchener Zeche Nordstern.
1898
Construction

Sinking of Schacht IV at Wattenscheid

Schacht IV was sunk at Wattenscheid in 1898, later to become the principal shaft of the Wattenscheid installation.
1907
Construction

Sinking of Schacht V at Wattenscheid

Schacht V, the ventilation shaft, was sunk at Wattenscheid in 1907.
1915
Operation

Firedamp and coal dust explosion at Anlage III/IV kills 14

In September 1915 a firedamp and coal dust explosion at the Wattenscheid Anlage III/IV killed 14 workers.
1921
Construction

Sinking of Schacht VI and construction of Schupp and Kremmer pit-head buildings

Schacht VI was sunk at Wattenscheid in 1921. In the same year the baths and administration buildings, designed by architects Fritz Schupp and Martin Kremmer in a neoclassical brick style and arranged around a three-winged courtyard, were erected. These are the earliest known surviving work of those architects.
1925
Operation

Firedamp explosion kills 18 and injures five

On 31 October 1925 a firedamp explosion at the colliery killed 18 workers and injured five. This was the largest mine disaster in the history of Wattenscheid.
1926
Legislation

Incorporation into Vereinigte Stahlwerke

The colliery was incorporated into the Vereinigte Stahlwerke in 1926.
1935
Closure

Schacht V abandoned

Schacht V at Wattenscheid was abandoned in 1935.
1958
Closure

Schacht II at Ückendorf abandoned

Schacht II at Ückendorf was abandoned in 1958.
1962
Construction

Steel headframe transferred from Zeche Zollverein to Schacht IV

The Deutsches Strebgerüst headframe originally designed by Schupp and Kremmer and erected in 1927 over Schacht IV of Zeche Zollverein was transferred to and re-erected over Schacht IV of Zeche Holland in 1962.
1963
Closure

Schacht I at Ückendorf taken out of service

Schacht I at Ückendorf was taken out of service in 1963.
1966
Legislation

Zeche Bonifacius merged into Holland

The Essen colliery Zeche Bonifacius was merged into Zeche Holland in 1966, contributing its shafts primarily for ventilation and transport.
1969
Operation

Peak annual output of 1.7 million tonnes achieved

The highest annual output in the colliery's history — 1.7 million tonnes — was achieved in 1969 with a workforce of approximately 3,000.
1973
Construction

Underground connection made to Zeche Zollverein; Verbundbergwerk formed

In 1973 an underground breakthrough (Durchschlag) connected Zeche Holland to Zeche Zollverein, and the two collieries were amalgamated into a Verbundbergwerk.
1974
Closure

Production in Wattenscheid halted

Coal production at the Wattenscheid installation was halted on 15 January 1974. The remaining open shafts continued to serve as transport and ventilation shafts.
1975
Closure

Demolition of most surface structures at Holland III/IV/VI

From late 1975 the majority of surface structures at the Wattenscheid installation on Schächte III/IV/VI were demolished.
1983
Closure

Last symbolic coal wagon raised at Schacht IV

On 29 December 1983 the last symbolic coal wagon was brought to the surface at Schacht IV, marking the formal end of all coal-related operations at the Wattenscheid site.
1988
Closure

Mine water pumping halted; Schächte IV and VI backfilled

Mine water pumping was halted in 1988 and Schächte IV and VI were backfilled in the same year.
1991–1993
Redevelopment

Site remediation and redevelopment of the 22-hectare Wattenscheid installation

The 22-hectare former site of Schächte III/IV/VI was comprehensively remediated between 1991 and 1993 and redeveloped as a mixed area of housing, commercial premises, and open space.
1998
Redevelopment

Lohnhalle opens as events venue; technology centre established

The listed Lohnhalle, renovated within the framework of the Internationale Bauausstellung Emscher Park, opened as an events venue in 1998. The adjacent office space was developed as a technology centre, later known as the Technologie- und Gründerzentrum Wattenscheid.
2018–2019
Heritage

Full structural restoration of Schacht IV headframe completed

Full structural restoration of the steel headframe over Schacht IV, costing approximately 2.8 million euros funded through urban development grants and contributions from the WirtschaftsEntwicklungsGesellschaft Bochum and the city, was carried out between spring 2018 and mid-2019. The adjacent machine hall had been demolished in January 2015 as part of the same programme.
2021
Redevelopment

Public square around headframe completed; Kumpeltreff opens

Landscaping and public realm works around the headframe were completed in June 2021. The Kumpeltreff café and social venue opened at the site in October 2021.

Sources and records

German Wikipedia article: Zeche Holland
Gelsenkirchener Geschichten Wiki: Zeche Holland
Route der Industriekultur site description and Themenroute listings
Ruhrgebiet-Industriekultur.de: Zeche Holland
Ruhrzechenaus.de: Zeche Holland (Bochum-Wattenscheid)
Alte Lohnhalle Wattenscheid (knepper-management.de) event venue history
Bochum Tourismus: guided tour description, Förderturm Zeche Holland
Joachim Huske: Die Steinkohlenzechen im Ruhrrevier, 3rd edition, Deutsches Bergbau-Museum Bochum, 2006
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