Site overview

This record documents the north-eastern of two proximate shaft structures within the Baňa Nováky lignite mine complex at Nováky, Prievidza District. Baňa Nováky was the principal lignite mine in the Horná Nitra coalfield and Slovakia’s largest and ultimately last underground coal operation. Prospecting began in 1938 and the first coal was raised in June 1940.

The mine expanded substantially after nationalisation, developing multiple colliery sections and later operating under Hornonitrianske bane Prievidza. Mining ceased on 20 December 2023, when the final tonne was extracted after total output of approximately 93 million tonnes. The specific formal name of this shaft structure has not yet been confirmed.

The mine occupies a broad industrial landscape at Nováky, where large-scale pithead buildings and shaft structures still read as an extensive former colliery complex.

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 Nováky lignite deposit was first noticed around 1900, when outcrops were observed on the road between Nováky and Zemianske Kostoľany. The Šalgótarjáni kamenouhoľná spoločnosť conducted a survey in 1906, and systematic borehole prospecting began in 1938. In March 1940, Handlovské uhoľné bane obtained the mining concession and commenced work at Pustý vrch.

The first coal wagon was brought to the surface on 14 June 1940 via an inclined drift — designated the Rudolf úpadnica — driven to a length of 187 metres, which struck the first local seam in November 1940. By the end of 1940, 66 tonnes had been extracted. Working conditions during the Second World War were difficult: flooding in the Rudolf workings led to the driving of a second inclined drift in 1941, and total output for the years 1940 to 1944 reached only 100,510 tonnes.

Administratively, the colliery belonged to Handlovské uhoľné bane until 1945. After nationalisation in 1946 it passed to Slovenské uhoľné bane, u.p., Prievidza, as a dependency of the Handlová works. Following liberation, major investment in surface and underground infrastructure began, centred on the construction of the central colliery section Baňa Mier.

The Baňa Lehota section was opened in 1951. In that same year, the Nováky works became independent as Novácke uhoľné bane. The enterprise underwent numerous reorganisations and name changes over subsequent decades, operating variously as Novácke uhoľné bane, n.p., Nováky; Uhoľné a lignitové bane Baňa Nováky, k.p.; Slovenské uhoľné bane, Baňa Nováky; and associated state enterprise forms.

In 1996, following privatisation, Baňa Nováky became a branch plant (o.z.) of the newly formed joint-stock company Hornonitrianske bane Prievidza (HBP). On 31 December 2006 it was dissolved as a separate branch and absorbed directly into HBP's organisational structure. The Nováky deposit's main seam ranged from 6 to 10 metres in thickness, locally up to 26 metres, and worked coal seams lay at depths of 150 to 450 metres.

Extraction used the longwall top-coal caving method for thick seams and conventional longwalls for thinner seams of around 4 metres. In December 2018 the Slovak government announced a phaseout programme for coal mining subsidies. The final tonne of coal was extracted from Baňa Nováky on 20 December 2023, bringing to an end over one hundred years of industrial coal mining in Slovakia; total output from the mine from 1940 to closure was approximately 93 million tonnes.

The site coordinates for this entry fall within the Baňa Nováky complex. The specific shaft structure recorded here is one of two proximate entries in the same mine area; its individual name has not been identified in consulted sources.

Timeline

1938–1940
Exploration

Borehole prospecting and concession grant at Pustý vrch

Systematic borehole prospecting began at the Nováky deposit in 1938. In March 1940, Handlovské uhoľné bane obtained the mining concession and began driving the Rudolf úpadnica inclined drift at Pustý vrch.
1940
Operation

First coal extracted

The first wagon of coal was brought to the surface on 14 June 1940 via the Rudolf úpadnica. By the end of 1940, 66 tonnes had been extracted.
1941–1944
Construction

Second inclined drift driven; wartime production constrained

Flooding in the Rudolf workings led to the driving of a second inclined drift in 1941, targeted at a daily output of 400 tonnes. Total output for 1940–1944 reached only 100,510 tonnes due to wartime difficulties.
1946
Legislation

Nationalisation; transfer to Slovenské uhoľné bane

After nationalisation, the Nováky colliery passed in 1946 to Slovenské uhoľné bane, u.p., Prievidza, as a dependency of the Handlová works. Major postwar investment in surface and underground infrastructure commenced.
1951
Operation

Novácke uhoľné bane established as independent enterprise

In 1951, the Nováky works became independent as Novácke uhoľné bane. The Baňa Lehota section was also opened that year, alongside the earlier Baňa Mier central section.
1996
Legislation

Privatisation; incorporation into Hornonitrianske bane Prievidza

Following privatisation, Baňa Nováky became a branch plant of the newly formed joint-stock company Hornonitrianske bane Prievidza (HBP) in 1996. On 31 December 2006 it was dissolved as a separate branch and absorbed directly into HBP's organisational structure.
2018
Closure

Slovak government announces coal mining phaseout programme

In December 2018 the Slovak government approved a phaseout programme for coal mining subsidies, setting the trajectory for closure of the Nováky mine.
2023
Closure

Final tonne extracted; Baňa Nováky closes

The last tonne of lignite was extracted from Baňa Nováky on 20 December 2023, closing Slovakia's last underground coal mine after 83 years of production and a cumulative output of approximately 93 million tonnes.
2023
Closure

Partial demolition planned; underground sealing underway

Following closure, partial demolition of surface structures was planned, with HBP intending to retain certain facilities for future non-mining projects. Underground sealing was estimated to take approximately two years.

Sources and records

Slovak Mining Museum website (muzeumbs.sk): Nováky entry, Cestovateľský zápisník
Hornonitrianske bane Prievidza website (hbp.sk): corporate history page
State Archive inventory: Novácke uhoľné bane, n.p., Nováky archival fund (1931–1986)
EURACOAL Annual Report 2023
Náučný banský turistický chodník Nováky educational trail description (naucnechodniky.eu)
SEAS (Slovak Electricity Producers): Nováky Power Plant closure article, December 2023
Teraz.sk (TASR): Z Bane Nováky vyviezli poslednú tonu uhlia, 20 December 2023
Wikipedia (English): Nováky Power Plant
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