In 1911 the owners of several mining concessions in
Neukirchen, Vluyn, Niephauserfeld, Kapellen and Moers that had been united as
the Grubenfeld Verein in 1857 founded
the Lower Rhine
Mining Company (Niederrheinische Bergwerk
AG) based in Moers. Later the company headquarters moved to Neukirchen.
The first pit to be sunk was situated on the
Dickscheheide between the villages of Neukirchen and Vluyn. The site was known
as Niederberg (literally the lower hill)
after a distinct elevation on the edge of the heath. The colliery was developed
on both sides of the railway with the area to the north initially meant as a
slag heap. The colliery is located on the site of the Hugen Hof farm (northern part) and the Kamphausen farm. The Bendschenhof
farm still exists today and stands just outside of the colliery enclosure along
the Ophülsgraben and Bendschenweg.
Work on pit Moers
1 started in 1912. Work on the second pit (named Moers 2) was begun in 1913. It was located next to the first pit.
This was also the year that building work started south of the colliery site to
provide for temporary workers housing.
As a result of the outbreak of WW1 pit construction
was halted. Pit Moers1 reached the final depth in 1917. Production started soon
after. The second pit wasn't completed until 1919. In 1921 all lifts and
conveyors were in place so production from both pits could start.
Because of economic strains the bituminous coal that
this mine produced wasn't in great demand. Thus, mining activities were temporarily suspended in
1932. After six months of cessation,
mining could be resumed. After that, the production
developed steadily. in the same year a briquette factory was opened that
operated on the colliery site. After WW2 the focus shifted towards the
production of household fuel from high grade anthracite coal (Anthrazit or Glanzkohle) and the production of
chemical compounds.
At the same time that the first pit was completed a
mining colony was built directly east of the colliery site. This Alte Kolonie (literally the Old Colony)
was situated halfway between Neukirchen and Vluyn and was situated next to the
older Plattenkolonie (1915-'16) consisting
of wooden barracks between the railway and the Waldstraße. The Alte Kolonie -
initially called Kolonie Bergwerk Niederberg - was developed between 1917 and
1925 and consists mainly of terraced houses for mine workers, some semidetached
houses for middle management and a few detached villas for upper management. Along
the Laukenstraße and Waldstraße semidetached and short terraced rows of three
dwellings were erected between 1918 and 1919. These English inspired buildings
are now part of the Plattenkolonie. The red wooden barracks were torn down in
the 1960s. After WW2 the Glück Auf Siedlung was developed east of the
Plattenkolonie. It is now part of Neukirchen South. The Alte Kolonie and
Neukirchen South are separated by allotments along a stream (Lorfeldgraben).
The Alte Kolonie (A) has the Weddigerplatz (W) at its
heart and is connected to the neighbouring Plattensiedlung (P) by the Hindenburgplatz
(H) and a strip of allotment gardens (G) along the Larfeldgraben. Along the
railway a row of barracks (B) used to stand. The outbuildings of the former
Dickesche Hof farm were transformed into a Casino (community hall). Both farm
and Casino no longer exist. The Höfken farm (h) next to the railway still
stands. The Londongshof farm was transformed into a small colony: the Londong
Kolonie (L). It was replaced by flats in the 1960s. After WW2 the Glück Auf
Siedlung was built. This lead to the foundation of a school (S) and a new
church (C) that replaced the wooden school buildings and provisionary church
building (Notkirche) that stood behind the Dickesche Hof.
The Alte Kolonie fits with the German ideas on social
housing. It doesn't follow the garden city principles on layout but shows a
more formal distribution of dwellings along long streets with a green open
space at its heart and allotment gardens
on the edge. The housing is not socially mixed but separated with the larger
semidetached and detached properties in the southern part of the mining colony.
The post-war extension (Glück Auf Siedlung) follows the pattern, but the
buildings are much less detailed in style and do not reference vernacular
architecture (Alte Kolonie) or the cottage style (Plattensiedlung).
The oldest part of the colony is a row of wooden barracks. The second phase fans out from the Hindenburgplatz. The third phase is focused on the Weddigenplatz. The latter is situated along the old route connecting Vluyn with Neukirchen, renamed Ernst Moritz Arndtstraße after the famous poet and patriotic writer. In the third phase The Bendschenweg was extended to the Siebertstraße. In the fourth phase of development the Laukenstraße was extended east and new streets were constructed running of the main route (E.M. Arndt Straße). The Bendschemweg wasn't extended across the Larfeldgraben as the new main route until the second half of the 1960s.This route then became the backbone of further housing developments (Fichte Siedlung).
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