Site overview

Pozu San Luis is a closed bituminous coal shaft situated in the valley of the river Samuño in the concejo of Langreo, Asturias. The area had been worked by mountain mining since the nineteenth century, with the Socavón Isabel and the Socavón Emilia dating from 1896 and 1904 respectively. In 1925 the company Carbones de La Nueva was acquired by the Real Compañía Asturiana de Minas (RCAM), which required a coal supply following the closure of its Arnao mine in 1915.

Between 1928 and 1930 RCAM profundised the vertical shaft. The shaft reached 420 metres across six working levels, though the sixth was never worked due to permanent flooding. The riveted-steel headframe and the large modernist engine house, with its distinctive stepped pediments and zinc pinnacles, both date from 1928 to 1930.

The engine house was extended in 1945 while preserving its original appearance. Hunosa integrated the shaft in 1968 and used it as an auxiliary of the neighbouring Pozo Samuño until extraction ceased in 1969. The shaft served maintenance functions until definitive closure in 2002.

In 2008 the Ayuntamiento de Langreo received the property from Hunosa. The shaft was declared a Bien de Interés Cultural as a Conjunto Histórico by Decreto 14/2013. The Ecomuseo Minero Valle de Samuño, which uses the shaft as its centrepiece, opened in June 2013.

Set in the enclosed valley of the río Samuño, the headframe and engine house form a compact and clearly legible historic pithead group.

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 valley of the river Samuño, a tributary of the Nalón, has been a site of coal extraction since at least the mid-nineteenth century. Mountain mining — the exploitation of seams above valley level through horizontal galleries driven into the hillsides — characterised the first period of activity. The Socavón Isabel dates from 1896, and the Socavón Emilia from 1904; the latter, part of the Carbones de La Nueva operation, forms part of the present ecomuseum visit as its underground entry point.

From the early twentieth century, Carbones de La Nueva was the principal operator in the valley, alongside the neighbouring Carbones Asturianos, which worked the Pozo Samuño on the same valley floor. In 1925 Carbones de La Nueva was acquired by the Real Compañía Asturiana de Minas (RCAM), a company whose zinc-smelting operations had depended on coal from its own Arnao mine until that colliery was closed in 1915. The acquisition of Carbones de La Nueva gave RCAM access to the Samuño valley reserves, and the company thereupon undertook the transition from mountain mining to vertical shaft extraction.

Between 1928 and 1930 the vertical shaft was sunk and the main surface infrastructure was constructed: the riveted-steel headframe, standing approximately 25 to 28 metres in height, and the engine house, which accommodates the extraction machine of 1929, the compressors, and the winding apparatus. The engine house is architecturally distinguished, with a principal façade of three bays articulated by pilasters and crowned by stepped pediments with zinc pinnacles of baroque inspiration, together with three decorative ceramic plaques. The building was extended in 1945 without substantially altering its appearance; the left wing dates from this later phase.

Coal extracted at the shaft was transported by railway down the Samuño valley to the Nalón and onward to the RCAM's coastal zinc-smelting facilities. The shaft reached a total depth of 420 metres across six working levels. The sixth level was never exploited in practice as it remained permanently flooded.

In 1968 the shaft was integrated into Hunosa along with the Carbones Asturianos operations in the same valley. Hunosa thereafter used the Pozo San Luis as an auxiliary for the neighbouring Pozo Samuño. Active extraction at San Luis ceased in 1969.

In its final years, the 1929 extraction machine continued to perform maintenance functions for the Pozo Samuño until that shaft also closed in 2002, at which point the Pozu San Luis was definitively closed as well. On 31 October 2008 the installations passed to the ownership of the Ayuntamiento de Langreo by agreement between Hunosa and the municipality, in preparation for the ecomuseum project. By Decreto 14/2013 of the Principado de Asturias, signed on 6 March 2013, the Pozu San Luis was declared a Bien de Interés Cultural with the category of Conjunto Histórico.

The declaration noted that the shaft and its associated buildings, including the engine house, the headframe, the lamproom, the washhouse, the offices, the workshop, the medical room, the forge, and the carpenter's shop, constituted one of the most outstanding examples of the industrialisation of the central mining valleys of Asturias. The BIC declaration had been initiated by resolution of the Consejería de Cultura y Turismo on 9 November 2009, and received favourable reports from the Comisión de Urbanismo y Ordenación del Territorio de Asturias, the Real Academia de la Historia, and the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando. The Ecomuseo Minero Valle de Samuño was inaugurated in June 2013, financed with Fondos Mineros from the 1998–2005 restructuring plan.

Visitors arrive at the Estación de El Cadavíu, where they board a narrow-gauge mining train that travels approximately two kilometres along the former coal railway of Carbones de La Nueva, passing through the Socavón Emilia gallery, the longest underground railway traverse in a working mine gallery in Spain, before arriving at the Pozu San Luis at a depth of 32 metres on the first level. The surface pithead buildings serve as exhibition spaces covering the history of mining, mining techniques, social organisation, safety, and the valley landscape. The ecomuseum recorded more than 13,000 visitors in its first summer season and reached a visitor record in 2024.

Timeline

1896
Exploration

Socavón Isabel opened in the Valle de Samuño

The Socavón Isabel, a mountain mining entry gallery, was opened in 1896 in the Valle de Samuño by the operations preceding Carbones de La Nueva.
1904
Exploration

Socavón Emilia opened

The Socavón Emilia was opened in 1904, part of the Carbones de La Nueva mountain mining operations in the Valle de Samuño. It later became the underground entry point for the Ecomuseo Minero.
1925
Legislation

Carbones de La Nueva acquired by Real Compañía Asturiana de Minas

In 1925 Carbones de La Nueva was acquired by the Real Compañía Asturiana de Minas (RCAM), which required a coal supply following the closure of its Arnao mine in 1915. The acquisition prompted the transition from mountain mining to vertical shaft extraction in the valley.
1928–1930
Construction

Vertical shaft sunk; riveted-steel headframe and engine house constructed

Between 1928 and 1930 the vertical shaft was sunk by Carbones de La Nueva under the RCAM. The riveted-steel headframe and the architecturally distinctive engine house were built in the same period. The extraction machine dates from 1929. The shaft reached 420 metres across six working levels.
1928–1969
Operation

Coal production under RCAM and Carbones de La Nueva

From 1928 until 1969 the shaft produced bituminous coal under the ownership of Carbones de La Nueva and the RCAM. Coal was transported by railway down the Samuño valley to the Nalón.
1945
Construction

Engine house extended without altering its appearance

The engine house was extended in 1945, adding a left wing, without substantially altering the original architectural composition or appearance.
1968
Closure

Integration into Hunosa; shaft used as auxiliary to Pozo Samuño

In 1968 the shaft was integrated into Hunosa. Extraction at the Pozu San Luis ceased in 1969, after which it served as an auxiliary for the neighbouring Pozo Samuño, with the 1929 extraction machine continuing to perform maintenance functions.
2002
Closure

Definitive closure of the shaft

The Pozu San Luis was definitively closed in 2002, coinciding with the closure of the neighbouring Pozo Samuño.
2008
Redevelopment

Installations transferred to the Ayuntamiento de Langreo

On 31 October 2008 the shaft installations passed to the ownership of the Ayuntamiento de Langreo by agreement with Hunosa, in preparation for the ecomuseum development.
2013
Heritage

Declared Bien de Interés Cultural (Conjunto Histórico)

By Decreto 14/2013 of 6 March 2013 the Principado de Asturias declared the Pozu San Luis a Bien de Interés Cultural with the category of Conjunto Histórico. The declaration covered the shaft, the engine house, the headframe, and the associated pithead buildings.
2013
Heritage

Ecomuseo Minero Valle de Samuño inaugurated

The Ecomuseo Minero Valle de Samuño was inaugurated in June 2013. The ecomuseum uses the Pozu San Luis as its centrepiece and is accessed by a narrow-gauge mining train from the Estación de El Cadavíu, with a 2-kilometre journey including passage through the Socavón Emilia gallery — the longest underground railway traverse in a working mine gallery in Spain.

Sources and records

BOE-A-2013-4410: Decreto 14/2013, de 6 de marzo, Declaración Bien de Interés Cultural (Conjunto Histórico), Pozo San Luis, Langreo
Wikipedia (Spanish): Ecomuseo minero del Valle de Samuño
Ecomuseo Minero Valle de Samuño website (ecomuseo.ayto-langreo.es): Pozo San Luis and El Valle sections
Asturnatura.com: Pozo San Luis
Patrimonio Industrial Asturias website: San Luis Mine (English version)
Turismo Asturias: Samuño Valley Ecomuseum and San Luis Pit (English version)
Valle del Nalón website: Pozo San Luis (La Nueva)
Langreo Vivirasturias: Pozo minero San Luis de La Nueva
Patrimonioindustrial.es: Historia del Pozo San Luis en Langreo
El Español: Minas, antiguas vías férreas y altos hornos — siete rutas por el patrimonio industrial asturiano
Montepío de la Minería Asturiana: La Asturias minera, reino de castilletes con mucha historia
Ecomuseo Minero Valle de Samuño blog (paraindustrial.blogspot.com)
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