Site overview

The Steenkoolmijn van Eisden was the easternmost of the seven Kempen collieries, located at Eisden in what is now the commune of Maasmechelen in the province of Limburg. The concession Sainte-Barbe of 2,170 hectares was granted on 29 November 1906, and the Société Anonyme des Charbonnages Limbourg-Meuse was founded in 1907. The two concessions were united in 1919 to form a 5,408-hectare concession, known as Limburg-Maas.

Production began in 1923. Both shafts reached depths of 730 and 812 metres respectively, connected underground at 590 metres in 1922. Working levels were at 600, 700, and 780 metres, later reaching 900 metres.

Peak employment was 7,340 workers in 1955, and peak annual production of 1,883,420 tonnes was achieved in 1957. Total production reached 73,191,000 tonnes. The mine closed on 18 December 1987.

The site was notable as the only Kempen colliery with two concrete headframes, built by the Monnoyer brothers in reinforced concrete. Schachtbok II was demolished in 1997 but a reconstruction was erected in 1998. Schachtbok I, known as the Puits de la Reine, was protected as a monument in 1993; Schachtbok II in 2002.

The coal washing plant and power station were replaced by the Maasmechelen Village outlet centre. The site now hosts the Connecterra gateway to the Nationaal Park Hoge Kempen.

The surviving headframe stands at the edge of a large redeveloped mining site, where retail and visitor uses now dominate but the structure still reads clearly as a historic marker in the landscape.

Map & photo

Steenkoolmijn van Eisden mine headframe or winding tower site
Photograph taken: 21 February 2026
Map markers and directions links are provided for location reference only and do not indicate public access or permission to enter a site.

History

The steenkoolmijn van Eisden had its origins in the discovery by André Dumont of coal at As in 1901. The concession Sainte-Barbe, covering 2,170 hectares, was granted on 29 November 1906. The Société Anonyme des Charbonnages Limbourg-Meuse was founded in 1907 and began purchasing land in Eisden from 1908. Garden suburb construction for workers' housing commenced immediately, with the first completed dwellings occupied in 1911. By royal decree of 15 November 1910 the company received authorisation to expropriate land for a light rail connection. The first phase of housing construction covered 1911 to 1913.

On 12 August 1911 boring of the freeze holes for the shafts began. Cementation of the tuff layers to stem the greatest water inflows was attempted via four diagonal borings. On 4 March 1914 the ice wall was complete and shaft sinking began. Work was halted in August 1914 by the war; it resumed in 1915 under German supervision. The French firm Entreprises Générales de Fonçages des Puits et Travaux de Mines de Paris broke its contract with the N.V. Limbourg-Meuse, and the Belgian firm Henricot of Saint-Etienne was engaged for the shaft lining. In contrast to the metal headframes of the other Kempen collieries, the two headframes at Eisden were built in reinforced concrete by the Monnoyer brothers. The concrete construction allowed a more slender structure at lower cost, though it proved less adaptable to underground subsidence in later decades. Schachtbok I, above what became known as the Puits de la Reine, was completed in 1921 and stands 45 metres tall, with the cable sheave at 34.5 metres height. The loading floor installation around this shaft was developed from late 1922. Schachtbok II was completed in 1926. Each headframe was provided with two stacked loading floors in concrete skeleton with metal structures attached.

On 30 August 1917, Schacht I reached the first coal seam; at the end of the war the lining works had reached 519 metres. Schacht II's freeze holes were bored before the First World War but freezing could only begin on 1 December 1918 for lack of coal and coolant during the conflict. Schacht I was ultimately deepened to 730 metres, Schacht II to 812 metres depth. Both shafts were connected underground at 590 metres depth in 1922. In 1923 Eisden became the third Kempen mine to begin commercial production, after Winterslag and Beringen. From 1923 to 1950 coal was extracted between 500 and 600 metres depth; from 1950 to 1965 between 600 and 700 metres; from the early 1970s working extended below 780 metres, reaching 900 metres via inclined galleries.

From 1912 a 170-metre concrete quay wall was built on the western bank of the Zuid-Willemsvaart canal to establish the mine's own coal loading harbour. In 1934 a connection via Neerharen to the Albertkanaal, ten kilometres south of Eisden, was completed. A portal crane loaded the barges. The mine had the highest proportion of foreign workers among the seven Kempen collieries. Following the post-war bilateral labour agreements, Polish, Slovenian, Italian, Moroccan, Spanish, Greek, and Turkish workers came to Eisden in succession. The magnificent garden suburb of Eisden-Tuinwijk, modelled on the English garden city concept, was developed from 1911 with curved streets, hedges, and various house types for different staff grades, in the opinion of many commentators the finest garden suburb in the Kempen. Queen Elisabeth visited the mine in 1922; the main highway through the suburb was named the Koninginnelaan in her honour, and a park with a life-sized marble statue of the queen was laid out.

The prestigious office complex, built in 1931 in a neo-classical Baroque style reflecting the French character of the principal shareholders (including the Brufina holding company of Paul Auguste Cyrille de Launoit and from 1930 the Evence Coppée group), faces a French-style garden. The main building of 1913, the oldest in the Kempen coalfield, served successively as stables, locomotive shed, garage, carpentry workshop, works office, and magazine before being restored and converted into the municipal arts and music academy of Eisden. Peak employment was 7,340 workers in 1955. Peak annual production of 1,883,420 tonnes was achieved in 1957. Total production over the mine's life reached 73,191,000 tonnes. During 64 years of operation 282 miners were killed by accident. A plan to close the mine in 1971 was abandoned following the oil crisis.

The mine closed on 18 December 1987, with the formal winding down of the site completed in 1988 and 1989. Heritage proposals emerged immediately after closure, given the exceptional architectural character of the concrete headframes. Several buildings were saved from demolition. In 1993, the principal mine buildings — including the main offices, main warehouse, Schachtbok II with its winding machine room and compressed-air hall — received monument protection. The bath house side elevation and the extension of the main offices received protection in May 1997. Schachtbok I, the Puits de la Reine and the oldest concrete headframe in the Kempen, received protection in December 2002. Schachtbok II had been demolished in 1997 but was reconstructed in 1998. In 2001 the Maasmechelen Village outlet centre opened on the former mine terrain in the area previously occupied by the coal washing plant and power station, which had both been demolished. In 1995 a museum of the miner's house (Museum van de Mijnwerkerswoning) opened in one of the double houses in the cité. From mid-2013 the mine site, renamed Connecterra, became the prestige gateway to the Nationaal Park Hoge Kempen. In 2025 the reconstructed Schachtbok was being fitted out as the new reception building for the national park.

Timeline

1906
Legislation

Concession Sainte-Barbe granted

The concession Sainte-Barbe of 2,170 hectares was granted on 29 November 1906.
1907
Legislation

Société Anonyme des Charbonnages Limbourg-Meuse founded

The operating company, Société Anonyme des Charbonnages Limbourg-Meuse, was founded in 1907.
1908
Construction

Land purchase begins; garden suburb construction commences

From 1908 the company began purchasing land in Eisden. Construction of the garden suburb workers' housing started immediately, with the first dwellings occupied in 1911.
1911
Construction

Freeze hole boring begins

Boring of freeze holes for the shafts began on 12 August 1911. The ice wall was complete by 4 March 1914.
1912
Construction

Coal loading harbour constructed on Zuid-Willemsvaart

From 1912 a 170-metre concrete quay wall was built on the western bank of the Zuid-Willemsvaart canal, the beginning of the mine's own coal loading harbour.
1919
Legislation

Concessions Sainte-Barbe and Guillaume Lambert united

On 20 May 1919 the concession Sainte-Barbe (2,170 ha) was united with the concession Guillaume Lambert (2,740 ha), forming a combined Limburg-Maas concession later enlarged to 5,408 hectares.
1921
Construction

Concrete headframe Schachtbok I completed

Schachtbok I, built by the Monnoyer brothers in reinforced concrete, was completed in 1921. It stands 45 metres tall with the cable sheave at 34.5 metres height. After the visit of Queen Elisabeth in 1922 it became known as the Puits de la Reine.
1922
Construction

Both shafts connected underground at 590 metres

Schacht I (730 m deep) and Schacht II (812 m deep) were connected to each other underground at 590 metres depth in 1922.
1922
Operation

First coal raised

The first steenkool was raised from the mine in 1922, with commercial sales beginning in 1923.
1926
Construction

Concrete headframe Schachtbok II completed

Schachtbok II, also in reinforced concrete by the Monnoyer brothers, was completed in 1926.
1934
Operation

Albertkanaal connection completed

A connection from the mine's coal harbour via Neerharen to the Albertkanaal, ten kilometres south of Eisden, was completed in 1934, expanding shipping options.
1955
Operation

Peak employment of 7,340 workers

Peak employment of 7,340 workers was recorded in 1955.
1957
Operation

Peak annual production of 1,883,420 tonnes

Annual production reached its maximum of 1,883,420 tonnes in 1957.
1987
Closure

Final closure

The mine closed on 18 December 1987. The formal closure of the site was completed in 1988 and 1989. Total production over the operational life of the mine was 73,191,000 tonnes.
1993
Heritage

Main buildings and Schachtbok II receive monument protection

The main offices, main warehouse, Schachtbok II with its winding machine room and compressed-air hall, were protected as monuments on 22 December 1993.
1995
Heritage

Museum van de Mijnwerkerswoning opens

In 1995, a museum of the miner's house (Museum van de Mijnwerkerswoning) opened in one of the double houses in the cité.
1997
Closure

Schachtbok II demolished

Schachtbok II, the 1926 concrete headframe, was demolished in 1997.
1998
Redevelopment

Schachtbok II reconstructed

A reconstruction of Schachtbok II was erected in 1998 to replace the demolished 1926 original.
2001
Redevelopment

Maasmechelen Village outlet centre opens on former mine terrain

In 2001 the Maasmechelen Village outlet centre opened on part of the former mine terrain, in the area previously occupied by the demolished coal washing plant and power station.
2002
Heritage

Schachtbok I (Puits de la Reine) receives monument protection

The original Schachtbok I, completed in 1921 and known as the Puits de la Reine, was protected as a monument on 12 December 2002.
2013
Redevelopment

Connecterra national park gateway opens on site

From mid-2013, the mine site, renamed Connecterra, became the prestige gateway to the Nationaal Park Hoge Kempen.

Sources and records

Dutch Wikipedia article: Steenkoolmijn van Eisden
Inventaris Onroerend Erfgoed record: Steenkoolmijn van Eisden (erfgoedobjecten/120397)
Inventaris Onroerend Erfgoed record: Schachtbokken van de mijn (erfgoedobjecten/1212)
Inventaris Onroerend Erfgoed record: Steenkoolmijn van Eisden, betonnen schachtbok 1 met ontvangstgebouw (aanduidingsobjecten/3288)
Belgischesteenkoolmijnen.be: Eisden
Koolmijnen.be: Eisden
Industriecultuur.be: Eisden
Fabriekofiel.com: Eisden
Ooit aan de Maas: 32 jaar geleden sloot mijn van Eisden, 2019
Wikipedia (Dutch): Eisden
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