Site overview

The site at Hinterschlagen, located approximately eight kilometres north of Ampflwang im Hausruckwald in Upper Austria, was a working colliery of the Wolfsegg-Traunthaler Kohlenwerks AG (WTK), extracting brown coal from the Hausruck lignite field until the sector's closure in 1991. The Hausruck coalfield was one of the principal brown coal producing regions in Upper Austria, with continuous industrial extraction by the WTK and its predecessors from the late eighteenth century. At Hinterschlagen, coal was extracted via the Rudolfstollen and related underground workings, with a mine railway — the Kohlebahn — transporting coal to the Brecher Buchleiten crusher, from which it was conveyed by cableway and later conveyor belt to the Zentralsortierungsanlage in Ampflwang for processing.

After the mine's closure the site passed into private hands and briefly operated as the "Bergbauerlebniswelt Hinterschlagen", a visitor attraction running mine railway rides and underground tours from around 1995. This operation ceased in the late 1990s when the private operator could not sustain necessary investment. The site is now operated as HAUSRUCKPARK, an outdoor adventure park offering off-road driving, archery, paintball and laser tag activities.

The site lies in wooded rural surroundings within the Hausruck landscape, where former mining ground is now softened by later recreational use and the historic colliery setting is only partly legible.

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

Brown coal extraction in the Hausruckviertel of Upper Austria began with the discovery of lignite deposits around 1760. By the end of the eighteenth century commercial extraction was under way. The Wolfsegg-Traunthaler Kohlenwerks- und Eisenbahngesellschaft, with its seat in Vienna and a works directorate at Wolfsegg am Hausruck, was formed in 1855–56 through the consolidation of field interests originally held by Alois Miesbach, Baron Rothschild and Graf Julien-Wallsee. The WTK subsequently acquired additional working rights in 1870, including the Bergbau des Grafen Arco at Windischhub, Hausruckedt and Eberschwang, effectively consolidating the entire Hausruck coal industry under a single operator.

From the mid-1920s the principal active extraction in the Hausruck was concentrated in the municipality of Ampflwang im Hausruckwald. The WTK operated multiple mining sectors across the Hausruck — including Wolfsegg, Thomasroith and Ampflwang — served by a network of narrow-gauge mine railways, tunnels and connecting infrastructure. The Ampflwang sector was linked to the associated Kraftwerk Timelkam, an 18-kilometre journey served by the Ampflwanger Bahn constructed by the WTK for the purpose. Coal from the outlying northern extraction fields, including the workings in and around Hinterschlagen and Illing, was transported by the Kohlebahn mine railway through the Heissler-Stollen tunnel to the Brecher Buchleiten coal crusher on the northern outskirts of Ampflwang. There the coal was crushed to a uniform size and conveyed to the Zentralsortierungsanlage — the central sorting and washing installation in Ampflwang — first by a 680-metre aerial ropeway and from 1964 by a conveyor belt.

The Zentralsortierungsanlage itself was built in 1925 and was among the most modern coal processing installations of its era. In 1988 a new coal washing plant replaced the old sorting installation; it operated for only seven years before the closure of the mine in 1995. The Hinterschlagen sector, including the Rudolfstollen and the associated mine railway infrastructure, closed in 1991, four years before the final closure of the WTK's last Ampflwang operations. The overall WTK mining operation at Ampflwang was finally liquidated on 25 May 1995, citing depletion of economically recoverable reserves, the expiration of coal supply contracts, and production costs exceeding world market prices, despite an estimated remaining reserve of more than 300 million tonnes in the broader Hausruck field.

Following the closure of the Hinterschlagen workings, the site — including the former mine railway station, the Rudolfstollen portal and associated rolling stock — passed to a private operator from the region. From approximately 1995, a visitor attraction called the "Bergbauerlebniswelt Hinterschlagen" operated on the site, offering rides on the mine railway with adapted seating in the coal wagons, entry into the Rudolfstollen, an underground film presentation about brown coal extraction using original archive footage, and guided tours with former miners. Contemporary accounts record that the attraction was well attended, particularly at weekends. However, the private operator was unable to finance the necessary capital investment from within the business and the attraction closed in the late 1990s.

The possibility of incorporating the Hinterschlagen site into the 2006 Oberösterreichische Landesausstellung "Kohle und Dampf" — which used the Zentralsortierungsanlage in Ampflwang as its main venue — was considered but ultimately not pursued, as public funding was directed to municipal and association-run projects rather than to the commercial private operator. As a result the infrastructure at Hinterschlagen — including rolling stock, mine railway trackwork, the Barbarakapelle, and the Rudolfstollen portal — was not restored for visitor access. By 2021 these remains were reported as deteriorating through lack of maintenance.

The site at Hinterschlagen is currently operated as HAUSRUCKPARK by a private business. The park offers outdoor adventure activities including off-road driving courses on approximately ten hectares of terrain for enduro motorcycles, trial bikes, quads, ATVs and four-wheel-drive vehicles; a 3D archery course; paintball on a course described as incorporating mining exhibits and rustic wooden structures; and laser tag. The HAUSRUCKPARK address is Hinterschlagen 6, Ampflwang im Hausruckwald.

Timeline

Redevelopment

Site operates as HAUSRUCKPARK outdoor adventure venue

The former Hinterschlagen colliery site at Hinterschlagen 6, Ampflwang im Hausruckwald, is operated as HAUSRUCKPARK, offering off-road driving, 3D archery, paintball and laser tag activities. Mining artefacts and structures from the former working are incorporated into parts of the activity grounds.
1760
Exploration

Brown coal deposits discovered in the Hausruckviertel

Lignite deposits were first discovered in the Hausruckviertel around 1760. Commercial extraction began before the end of the eighteenth century.
1855–1856
Legislation

Wolfsegg-Traunthaler Kohlenwerks- und Eisenbahngesellschaft formed

The WTK was formed in 1855–56 through consolidation of coal field interests held by Alois Miesbach, Baron Rothschild and Graf Julien-Wallsee, with its registered seat in Vienna and a works directorate at Wolfsegg am Hausruck.
1919
Legislation

Land Oberösterreich and Austrian state acquire WTK shareholding

In 1919 the Land Oberösterreich and the Austrian state took participatory shareholdings in the WTK.
1925
Construction

Zentralsortierungsanlage Ampflwang built

The Zentralsortierungsanlage — the central coal sorting and processing installation at Ampflwang — was built in 1925 and was among the most modern coal processing plants of its era.
1946
Legislation

WTK fully nationalised

The WTK was fully nationalised in 1946.
1964
Construction

Aerial ropeway from Brecher Buchleiten replaced by conveyor belt

The 680-metre aerial ropeway conveying crushed coal from the Brecher Buchleiten crusher to the Zentralsortierungsanlage in Ampflwang was replaced by a conveyor belt in 1964.
1988
Construction

New coal washing plant enters service

A new coal washing plant opened at Ampflwang in 1988, replacing the 1925 Zentralsortierungsanlage as the primary coal processing facility.
1991
Closure

Hinterschlagen sector closes

The Hinterschlagen mining sector, including the Rudolfstollen and associated mine railway infrastructure, closed in 1991, four years before the final closure of the WTK's remaining Ampflwang operations.
1992
Closure

Closure of WTK Ampflwang operations decided

In 1992 the decision was taken to liquidate the remaining WTK mining operations at Ampflwang.
1995
Closure

Final closure of WTK Ampflwang mine

The WTK ceased operations at its last Ampflwang mine (Grube Schmitzberg) on 25 May 1995, citing depletion of economically recoverable reserves, expiration of coal purchase contracts, and production costs exceeding world market prices.
1995–1999
Redevelopment

Bergbauerlebniswelt Hinterschlagen visitor attraction operates

From approximately 1995, a private operator established the "Bergbauerlebniswelt Hinterschlagen" on the former mine site, running mine railway rides, underground tours of the Rudolfstollen, film screenings of archive footage, and guided tours with former miners. The attraction was well attended at weekends but closed in the late 1990s when required investment could not be financed.
2006
Heritage

Oberösterreichische Landesausstellung "Kohle und Dampf" held at Ampflwang

The 2006 Upper Austrian Landesausstellung on the theme "Kohle und Dampf" (Coal and Steam) used the former Zentralsortierungsanlage in Ampflwang as its main venue. The Hinterschlagen site was considered for inclusion but not supported, as public funding was directed to municipal and association-run projects.

Sources and records

Dokumentationszentrum für Europäische Eisenbahnforschung: Hausruck Bergbau Kohle Grubenbahnen
Dokumentationszentrum für Europäische Eisenbahnforschung: Kohlebahnhof Hinterschlagen Heissler-Stollen
German Wikipedia: Wolfsegg-Traunthaler Kohlenwerks AG
German Wikipedia: Zentralsortierungsanlage Ampflwang
German Wikipedia: Ampflwang im Hausruckwald
English Wikipedia: Ampflwang im Hausruckwald
ÖGEG / Lokpark Ampflwang museum information
Hausruckpark website (hausruckpark.at)
Aldiana Club Ampflwang partner listing for Hausruckpark
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