
The winching mechanism.
'Big Pit' (
Welsh: ''Pwll Mawr'') was a
coal mine opened in
1880, which today is preserved for visitors under the auspices of the
National Museums and Galleries of Wales as the '
National Mining Museum of Wales'
Big Pit is an Anchor Point of ERIH, The
European Route of Industrial Heritage. The museum is located close to the
South Wales valley town of
Blaenavon, which is a
World Heritage Site.
The pit was first worked in
1860, called "Big Pit" because it was the first shaft in Wales large enough to allow two tramways. In the late
1870s the shaft was deepened to 293 feet. By
1908, Big Pit provided employment for 1,122 people, but this number gradually decreased until by
1970 the workforce only numbered 494. It closed on
February 2 1980.
The mine reopened for visitors in
1983. Big Pit is adjacent to the preserved
Pontypool and Blaenavon Railway.
As with all national museums in
Wales, admittance is free. The site was redeveloped in
2003, with design work from TACP/
Brooke Millar Partnership,
Powell Dobson Partnership and
Haley Sharpe, with
Davis Langdon providing cost and project management services. In
2005, it won the prestigious
Gulbenkian Prize.
No 'contraband' i.e. matches or lighters or articles with batteries such as electronic watches or cameras are allowed down the shaft. Visitors must surrender these for temporary safekeeping before they enter the cage.
External links
★
Official website – National Mining Museum of Wales
★
Wales Underground for background details