Site overview

The Pozo Santiago is a closed underground coal mine at Valdefarrucos, Caborana, in the concejo of Aller, Asturias. It was one of three shaft collieries operated by the Sociedad Hullera Española in the lower Aller valley, together with the Pozo San Jorge and the Pozo San Antonio. The Sociedad Hullera Española was founded in 1892 and dominated coal mining in the lower Aller valley until its integration into HUNOSA in 1967.

The Santiago shaft was sunk around 1951 and entered service in that same period, reaching 581 metres depth across eleven levels. Together with the Pozo San Jorge and Pozo San Antonio, it formed the Área Aller group within HUNOSA and exploited the María Luisa, Sotón, Generalas, and San Antonio coal packages. In 1988–89, the original 38-metre headframe — installed in the early 1950s — was replaced by a modern 60-metre steel extraction tower, erected around the old structure while the shaft remained in service.

The shaft was deepened at the same time from the ninth to the eleventh level. Coal extraction ceased at the end of 2018, making the Pozo Santiago the last mine to operate in Aller. The 60-metre extraction tower stands on the site, with multiple proposals for future use under discussion but none confirmed at the time of research.

The extraction tower stands in the settled lower Aller valley, where it reads as a tall and dominant remnant within a broad former colliery site.

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 Sociedad Hullera Española, founded in 1892, exercised sole control over the coal mining territory of the lower Aller valley through three shaft collieries: San Jorge, Santiago, and San Antonio. The Pozo Santiago was sunk around 1951 at Valdefarrucos in Caborana, reaching 581 metres depth with a shaft diameter of six metres at the collar and eleven underground working levels. An initial headframe — of the type associated with Duro Felguera construction from the early 1950s — was installed at the start of operations and stood 38 metres high.

The Sociedad Hullera Española was integrated into HUNOSA in 1967, and the Santiago shaft became one of the constituent collieries of HUNOSA's Área Aller group, alongside the Pozo San Jorge and the Pozo San Antonio. The shaft exploited the María Luisa, Sotón, Generalas, and San Antonio coal packages. The Pozo San Jorge, situated nearby and connected underground to the Santiago at the third level, closed its active production in 1995, after which all activity in Caborana was concentrated at the Pozo Santiago.

In 1988 HUNOSA commissioned the construction of a new 60-metre extraction tower to replace the original 38-metre headframe and to modernise the shaft's output capacity. The tower was erected by Duro Felguera without dismantling the old headframe and without interrupting shaft production. In November 1988, once the new tower was fully assembled, the original headframe was dismantled.

Simultaneously, the shaft was deepened from the ninth to the eleventh level and its caldera, reaching a final depth of minus 306 metres on the deepest level. These works were completed in early February 1989. The Pozo San Antonio at Moreda, underground-connected to the Santiago, ceased productive extraction in October 1994 but remained in use for mine services; its 200 miners transferred to the Santiago upon its final closure in October 2003.

From that point the Pozo Santiago was the only operative extraction colliery in the concejo of Aller, with a workforce of around 850. Coal extraction at the Pozo Santiago ceased at the end of 2018, simultaneously with the Pozo Carrio, after which the only operating pit in Asturias was the Pozo San Nicolás. The closure of the Santiago ended mining in Aller.

Following closure, activities at the shaft were confined to recovery of underground materials. The Aller Turismo website describes the shaft as currently operative for innovative and strategic purposes, though multiple proposals for future use — including geothermal energy, a data centre, a cider cellar, and a vaccine storage facility — had been raised without resolution as of 2022.

Timeline

1892–1966
Operation

Sociedad Hullera Española controls coal mining in lower Aller valley

The Sociedad Hullera Española, founded in 1892, exercised sole control of the lower Aller valley's coal mining through its three shaft collieries — Pozo San Jorge, Pozo Santiago, and Pozo San Antonio. Mountain mining in the valley preceded shaft sinking by decades.
1951
Construction

Pozo Santiago sunk to 581 metres with eleven levels

The Pozo Santiago vertical shaft was sunk around 1951 at Valdefarrucos, Caborana, by the Sociedad Hullera Española. The shaft reached 581 metres depth, six metres in diameter at the collar, with eleven underground working levels. An initial headframe, 38 metres high, was installed and attributed to Duro Felguera construction.
1967
Legislation

Sociedad Hullera Española integrated into HUNOSA; Área Aller formed

In 1967 the Sociedad Hullera Española was integrated into HUNOSA. The Pozo Santiago joined the Pozo San Jorge and Pozo San Antonio as part of HUNOSA's Área Aller group, exploiting the María Luisa, Sotón, Generalas, and San Antonio coal packages.
1988–1989
Construction

New 60-metre extraction tower erected; shaft deepened to 11th level

Between 1988 and early 1989, HUNOSA commissioned a new 60-metre steel extraction tower, built by Duro Felguera around the existing 38-metre headframe without stopping shaft production. In November 1988 the old headframe was dismantled. The shaft was simultaneously deepened from the ninth to the eleventh level, reaching a caldera at minus 306 metres. Works were complete by February 1989.
1995
Operation

Pozo San Jorge closes; all Caborana production concentrated at Pozo Santiago

The Pozo San Jorge, connected underground to the Santiago at the third level, closed its active production on 1 May 1995. All coal extraction at Caborana was subsequently concentrated in the Pozo Santiago.
2003
Operation

Pozo San Antonio closes; 200 miners transfer to Pozo Santiago

The Pozo San Antonio at Moreda, underground-connected to the Santiago, ceased productive extraction in October 2003. Approximately 200 miners from the San Antonio transferred to the Santiago, which became the sole extraction colliery of the concejo of Aller with around 850 employees.
2018
Closure

Coal extraction ceases at Pozo Santiago; mining in Aller ends

At the end of 2018 the Pozo Santiago ceased coal extraction, simultaneously with the Pozo Carrio. This ended mining in the concejo of Aller. The Pozo Santiago was the last colliery in Aller to close. Following closure, activities were confined to recovery of underground materials.
2018
Redevelopment

Post-closure: multiple proposals for future use under consideration

Following closure, several proposals were raised for the future use of the Pozo Santiago site, including geothermal energy, an underground data centre, a cider cellar, and a vaccine storage facility, none of which had been confirmed as of 2022. The Aller Turismo website describes the shaft as operative for innovative and strategic purposes.

Sources and records

MTI Blog (J.M. Sanchis, 2014): Pozo Santiago, Caborana de Aller, Aller, Asturias
MTI Blog (J.M. Sanchis, 2017): Pozo Santiago (1988), Caborana de Aller, Aller, Asturias
MTI Blog (J.M. Sanchis, 2022): El incierto destino del pozo Santiago
Minas de Asturias blog: Pozo Santiago
Archivo Histórico Minero: Castillete e instalaciones del Pozo Santiago, Caborana, Aller, 1960
Aller Turismo official website: Pozo Santiago
Wikipedia (Spanish): Pozo San Jorge
Patrimonio Industrial Asturias (patrimoniuindustrial.com): San Jorge Mine record
Wikipedia (Spanish): Hunosa
GRUCOMI blog: Las Rutas de los Castilletes – Santa Bárbara
This researched site record is part of the HAABase Mines database. Normal personal research and browsing is welcome. Automated bulk extraction, republication, or harvesting of site text and images is not permitted without written consent.