Site overview

Kilgruvans lave, formally known as Södra schaktets lave, is the surviving headframe building at the Södra Schakt (Southern Shaft) in the Kärrgruvan district of Norberg, Västmanland. The structure was built in 1902 over a shaft that descends to 180 metres, which is itself older and has carried earlier superstructures. The Kärrgruvan area contains one of the most historically dense iron-ore mining landscapes in Norberg, with workings documented from at least 1440.

Adjacent features include the Maskinhuset (engine house, 1901), Risbergs konstschakt housing Norbergs Gruvmuseum (built 1876), and the open pits of Kilgruvan, Pansargruvan, and Mossgruveparken. The site forms part of Ekomuseum Bergslagen. In July 2025 a collapse occurred in the Kilgruvan open pit immediately adjacent to the lave, and in August 2025 structural damage was identified in the headframe itself.

The building was fenced off pending inspection and remediation.

The headframe stands in an open historic mining landscape among pits and surviving buildings, where the site remains clearly legible despite recent instability and fencing.

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

Iron ore working in the Kärrgruvan area of Norberg has a documented history stretching back to at least 1440 and is part of the broader Norberg mining tradition that reaches back to the early medieval period. The site lies on a rich belt of manganese-bearing iron ore in the northern part of Norberg municipality.

Mining in the immediate area of what became the Mossgruveparken complex was conducted over centuries through open-pit (dagbrott) methods, deepening as extraction technology evolved. The Norbergs gruvmuseum, housed in the building above Risbergs konstschakt — a structure of slag brick and painted timber raised in 1876 over a shaft 114 metres deep — preserves the evidence of the pump systems that kept the surrounding workings free of water. Pumping power was delivered from a waterwheel (Polhemshjulet) several kilometres away via a stånggång (rod transmission system).

Södra schaktet, over which Kilgruvans lave stands, is an older shaft that carried earlier superstructures before the present building was erected. In 1901 the Maskinhuset (engine house) was built to house the machines and steel cables that drove the ore hoist. In 1902 the present lave was raised over the shaft in the construction style of the period. From the lave, ore was transferred to wagons on rails leading to a sorting house (skrädhus), where it was sorted on conveyor belts. Active mining in the Kärrgruvan complex continued until 1981.

After closure, the site was preserved as part of Ekomuseum Bergslagen. The Kärrgruvan gruvmiljö comprises the gruvmuseum, Mossgruveparken, Södra schaktets lave, the Maskinhuset, and numerous surviving open pits and shaft structures. The shaft below the lave is today partially backfilled.

In July 2025 a collapse (ras) occurred in the Kilgruvan open pit immediately adjacent to the Norbergs gruvmuseum building, causing the museum to close temporarily and prompting an underwater robot survey to assess the stability of the piller supporting the museum structure. In August 2025, structural damage — a displaced joint on the southern leg of the lave — was identified in Södra schaktets lave, and Linnévägen alongside the building was closed. An expert in historic structures inspected the building and Länsstyrelsen Västmanland was formally notified. The two incidents were assessed by a geologist as unrelated. The longer-term future of the headframe, noted as one of the last of its kind, was subject to assessment by Länsstyrelsen.

Timeline

1440
Exploration

Iron-ore workings at Kärrgruvan documented

The mines in the Kärrgruvan area of Norberg are recorded in documents from at least 1440. Medieval open-pit iron-ore extraction was conducted on the ridge now occupied by Mossgruveparken. Carl von Linné visited Mossgruvan on his Bergslagsresa on 13 January 1734.
1876
Construction

Risbergs konstschakt building erected

The building housing what is now Norbergs gruvmuseum was raised in 1876 in slag brick and painted timber above Risbergs konstschakt, a 114-metre-deep shaft used for pumping water from the surrounding mines via a stånggång rod-transmission system connected to a distant waterwheel.
1891–1892
Operation

Norbergsstrejken — major miners' strike

The 1891–92 Norbergsstrejken was one of the most significant disputes in the history of the Swedish labour movement, involving sustained solidarity strike action among iron-ore miners. Despite strong cohesion, the strike did not result in a workers' victory.
1901–1902
Construction

Maskinhuset and Kilgruvans lave constructed

The Maskinhuset (engine house) was built in 1901 to house machinery and steel cables for ore hoisting. In 1902 the present headframe building — Södra schaktets lave, also known as Kilgruvans lave — was erected over the Southern Shaft (180 metres deep) in the construction style of the period.
1981
Closure

Active mining at Kärrgruvan ends

Mining operations and use of the gruvmiljö complex at Kärrgruvan ceased in 1981. The underground shaft below Kilgruvans lave was partially backfilled.
1981
Heritage

Preservation as part of Ekomuseum Bergslagen

The Kärrgruvan complex, including Södra schaktets lave, Maskinhuset, and Mossgruveparken, was preserved as a heritage site forming part of Ekomuseum Bergslagen. Norbergs gruvmuseum opened in the Risbergs konstschakt building.
2025
Heritage

Collapse in Kilgruvan pit and structural damage to lave

In July 2025 a collapse occurred in the Kilgruvan open pit adjacent to the gruvmuseum. An underwater robot survey was conducted to assess the stability of the museum building's supporting pillar. In August 2025 a displaced joint on the southern leg of Södra schaktets lave was discovered and the building was fenced off. Länsstyrelsen Västmanland opened a formal process regarding the future of the headframe.

Sources and records

Kulturarv Västmanland: Kärrgruvans gruvmiljö
Kulturarv Västmanland: Maskinhuset & Södra schaktets lave
Norbergs Gruvmuseum & Mossgruveparken, Visit Norberg
Kulturbilder blog: Kärrgruvans gruvmiljö (2014)
Trippa.se: Norbergs gruvmuseum and gruvresa runt Noren
Hotel listing proximity data: Kilgruvans lave, Norberg
Lokalt i Dalarna: Kilgruveraset undersöktes med robot (2025)
Västerås Tidning: Gruvlaven i Kärrgruvan måste renoveras (2025)
Sveriges Radio P4 Västmanland: report on Södra schaktets lave closure (August 2025)
Norbergs kommun: Uppdatering — Södra schaktets lave (August 2025)
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