Site overview

Szyb Kolejowy is the working access shaft of Kopalnia Guido, a private hard coal mine founded in 1855 by Count Guido Henckel von Donnersmarck in Zabrze. The shaft was sunk in the 1870s–1880s as the mine's second shaft, initially named Eisenbahn after the railway company that co-financed the mine. It was deepened to 342 metres by the 1890s, and a steel winding tower was built above it in 1901.

Coal production at the Guido mine ceased in 1928 following sale to the Prussian state and incorporation into the larger Königin-Luise-Grube system. The shaft complex was substantially rebuilt between 1927 and 1931, receiving a new top-shaft building and an electric winding machine manufactured jointly by AEG Berlin and Hüttenwerke Gleiwitz Malapana. Following decades as a research and experimental mine, the site was opened to tourists in 1982 and reopened in 2007 after a period of closure.

The shaft's headframe, winding-engine house, and underground workings at depths of 170, 320, and 355 metres are now part of the Muzeum Górnictwa Węglowego w Zabrzu.

Set within the urban fabric of Zabrze, the shaft complex remains a compact and clearly defined historic site within later museum use.

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

Kopalnia Guido was founded when Count Guido Henckel von Donnersmarck received a mining concession on 2 October 1855. The count hoped to find coking coal on a field of 1.03 km² straddling the former villages of Dorotheendorf and Makoschau, adjacent to the already-productive state mine Königin-Luise-Grube. Sinking of the first shaft, named Barbara, began at the end of 1855 but was abandoned after around 30 metres due to quicksand and a tectonic fault encountered in 1856.

Work shifted to a second shaft, named Concordia and later Kunstschacht (ultimately renamed Guido), which opened the first working level at 80 metres. Extraction at that level of seams Reden (509) and Pochhammer (510) proceeded through the 1860s, although tectonic disturbances made conditions difficult throughout. A further partner, the Górnośląskie Towarzystwo Kolejowe (Oberschlesische Eisenbahn Gesellschaft), joined in financing the mine and provided the name for the second shaft to be sunk: the Eisenbahn shaft, known in Polish as szyb Kolejowy.

Work on the Kolejowy shaft began in the 1870s and it was brought into service around 1880. A tower, probably of masonry design, was erected above it, and a steam winding engine was installed in a brick engine house alongside a boiler room and administrative building. In 1885 the mine achieved its highest annual output, 313,000 tonnes of coal.

However, overall profitability was poor and in 1887 Count Guido sold the mine to the Prussian state mining treasury (Königlich-Preussischer Bergfiskus). It was incorporated as the southern field of the state mine Königin-Luise-Grube. State ownership brought new investment: Szyb Guido was deepened to 320 metres and Szyb Kolejowy was deepened from around 314 metres to its final depth of 336.63 metres during the early 1890s, opening the 320-metre working level.

At the turn of the twentieth century, water pumped from the Guido workings was used to power an underground hydroelectric installation. In 1904 the workings of Guido were connected underground with those of the newly built colliery Delbrück (later Kopalnia Makoszowy) to the south, and in 1912 Guido was formally merged with Delbrück. Thereafter productive extraction was conducted mainly through the Makoszowy shafts, while the Guido shafts served principally as drainage and ventilation.

A steel winding tower was erected over Szyb Kolejowy in 1901. In 1912 Guido was absorbed into Kopalnia Delbrück and coal extraction through the Guido and Kolejowy shafts effectively ended, with Guido serving the drainage function for the wider district. Production at the Guido section ceased entirely in 1928 and Szyb Guido was decommissioned.

Szyb Kolejowy lost its hoisting role and from 1928 to 1967 served only for lowering materials and timber for the remaining underground work. Between 1927 and 1931 the surface complex at Szyb Kolejowy was substantially rebuilt: a new two-storey top-shaft building in steel-framed brick construction was erected in 1929–1931 with a 26-metre steel trestle-type hoist tower, and a new engine house from 1927 was equipped with an electric winding machine — a co-production of AEG Berlin (electrical systems) and Preussische Bergwerks- und Hütten-AG, Hüttenwerke Gleiwitz Malapana (mechanical systems), installed in 1931, together with a generator, control panel, and current converter, all from 1927. After the Second World War the site was administered as Ruch Guido within Kopalnia Makoszowy.

In 1967 the former Guido mine area was transferred to the Zakłady Konstrukcyjno-Mechaniczne Przemysłu Węglowego. A research and experimental mine, Kopalnia Doświadczalna M-300, was created on the site with the purpose of testing new mining machines and equipment; working excavation of residual seam 620 at the 400-metre level took place during this period. In 1975 ownership passed to the Centralny Ośrodek Projektowo-Konstrukcyjny KOMAG.

In 1979–1980 Szyb Guido was backfilled, leaving Szyb Kolejowy as the sole active shaft. In 1982 an agreement was signed with the Muzeum Górnictwa Węglowego w Zabrzu to open part of the underground workings as a heritage attraction, and between 1982 and 1996 tourist parties were admitted. A ventilation crisis caused by decisions at neighbouring mines led to the closure of the tourist route.

In 2007, following intervention by the city of Zabrze, the mine was reopened as Zabytkowa Kopalnia Węgla Kamiennego Guido. The level-170 underground route was opened to visitors that year, level 320 in 2008, and sublevel 355 in February 2015. In April 2013 Kopalnia Guido was formally integrated with the Muzeum Górnictwa Węglowego w Zabrzu.

Szyb Kolejowy serves as the operating shaft through which visitors descend; the 1929–1931 headframe and the 1927–1931 engine house with its working electric winding machine remain in situ. Kopalnia Guido was entered in the heritage register in 1987 and was designated a Pomnik Historii as part of the Zabrze historic coal mine complex by decree of the President of the Republic of Poland on 14 July 2020. It is also an Anchor Point of the European Route of Industrial Heritage (ERIH).

Timeline

1855
Legislation

Mining concession granted to Count Donnersmarck

Count Guido Henckel von Donnersmarck received his mining concession on 2 October 1855 for a field of 1.03 km² near Zabrze, intending to extract coking coal from a field adjacent to the state mine Königin-Luise-Grube.
1870–1880
Construction

Szyb Kolejowy sunk

Work on a second shaft, named Eisenbahn (Kolejowy) after the railway company co-partner, commenced in the 1870s. The shaft was brought into service around 1880 and was probably surmounted by a masonry tower with a steam winding engine in a brick engine house.
1885
Operation

Peak production of 313,000 tonnes

The mine achieved its highest recorded annual output of 313,000 tonnes in 1885, the peak of its productive life under private ownership.
1887
Legislation

Mine sold to Prussian state; incorporated as southern field of Königin-Luise-Grube

In 1887 Count Guido Henckel von Donnersmarck sold the mine to the Prussian state mining treasury. It was incorporated as the Pole Południowe (southern field) of the state Königin-Luise-Grube, bringing new investment and deeper working of the 320-metre level.
1890–1895
Construction

Szyb Kolejowy deepened to 336.63 metres

During the early 1890s Szyb Kolejowy was deepened to its final depth of 336.63 metres (initially recorded as 314 metres), opening the 320-metre working level. Szyb Guido was simultaneously deepened to 320 metres.
1901
Construction

Steel winding tower erected over Szyb Kolejowy

A steel winding tower was built above Szyb Kolejowy in 1901, replacing the earlier structure.
1904
Construction

Underground connection made with Kopalnia Delbrück

In 1904 an underground connection was established between the Guido workings and those of the newly built Kopalnia Delbrück (later Makoszowy) to the south, after which productive extraction shifted progressively to the Delbrück shafts.
1912
Operation

Formal merger with Kopalnia Delbrück

In 1912 the Guido mine was formally incorporated into Kopalnia Delbrück. The Guido and Kolejowy shafts thereafter served principally as drainage and ventilation for the wider mining district rather than for productive hoisting.
1927–1931
Construction

Surface complex at Szyb Kolejowy rebuilt

Between 1927 and 1931 the Szyb Kolejowy surface complex was substantially modernised. A new engine house was built in 1927, equipped with an electric winding machine — co-produced by AEG Berlin and Preussische Bergwerks- und Hütten-AG, Hüttenwerke Gleiwitz Malapana — installed in 1931 along with a generator, control panel, and current converter. A new two-storey steel-framed top-shaft building with a 26-metre steel trestle hoist tower was erected between 1929 and 1931.
1928
Closure

Coal production ceases; Szyb Guido decommissioned

In 1928, following exhaustion of the remaining coal reserves, Szyb Guido was decommissioned and production through the Guido mine section ended. Szyb Kolejowy lost its hoisting role and served only for lowering materials and timber until 1967.
1967
Redevelopment

Site transferred; Kopalnia Doświadczalna M-300 created

In 1967 the former Guido mine area was transferred to the Zakłady Konstrukcyjno-Mechaniczne Przemysłu Węglowego and the Kopalnia Doświadczalna M-300 was established to test new mining machines and equipment. Residual working of seam 620 at the 400-metre level continued during this period.
1979–1980
Closure

Szyb Guido backfilled

Between 1979 and 1980 Szyb Guido was backfilled, leaving Szyb Kolejowy as the only active shaft at the site.
1982–1996
Heritage

First tourist opening of underground workings

In 1982 an agreement between the Kopalnia Doświadczalna M-300 and the Muzeum Górnictwa Węglowego w Zabrzu opened part of the underground workings to tourists. The heritage route operated until 1996, when ventilation problems caused by decisions at neighbouring mines forced its closure.
1987
Heritage

Entered in heritage register

Kopalnia Guido was entered in the regional monuments register in 1987, affording it full legal protection.
2007
Heritage

Reopened as Zabytkowa Kopalnia Węgla Kamiennego Guido

Following intervention by the city of Zabrze, the mine reopened to tourists in 2007 as Zabytkowa Kopalnia Węgla Kamiennego Guido. The level-170 underground route was opened that year and the level-320 route in 2008. Szyb Kolejowy serves as the operative shaft through which visitors descend.
2013
Heritage

Integrated with Muzeum Górnictwa Węglowego w Zabrzu

In April 2013 Kopalnia Guido was formally merged with the Muzeum Górnictwa Węglowego w Zabrzu into a single institution under that name.
2015
Heritage

Sublevel 355 opened; tourist route extended

In February 2015 the sublevel at 355 metres was opened to visitors, extending the underground tourist route to one of the deepest heritage mining attractions in Europe.
2020
Heritage

Designated Pomnik Historii

By decree of the President of the Republic of Poland dated 14 July 2020, the Zabrze complex of historic hard coal mines — including Kopalnia Guido with the Szyb Kolejowy surface complex and underground workings — was designated a Pomnik Historii. The site is also an Anchor Point of the European Route of Industrial Heritage (ERIH).

Sources and records

Polish Wikipedia article: Kopalnia Guido
Kopalnia Guido official website: historia
Zabytek.pl heritage register entry: zespół zabudowań i wyrobisk chodnikowych dawnej Kopalni Guido
Zabytek.pl heritage register entry: Zabrze — zespół zabytkowych kopalni węgla kamiennego (English)
Urząd Miejski w Zabrzu: zabytki techniki listing
Szlak Zabytków Techniki: Kopalnia Guido entry
NetTG.pl: article on the reopening of Szyb Guido, December 2021
Historia Zabrza website: Kopalnia Makoszowy history
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