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Königsgrube

© Henning Rogge

© Henning Rogge

© Henning Rogge

Address

Hofstraße 24
44651 Herne

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A former pumping station of a disused colliery becomes an installation, the name remains and sounds promising: Königsgrube. Markus Jeschaunig's work, in which he transforms fragments of the demolished building into a hybrid landscape, is characterised by past and future.

From 1860 to 1967, coal mining at the Königsgrube colliery in Herne-Röhlinghausen was extremely productive, then the black gold was extracted, leaving the earth depleted and perforated with subsidence of up to ten metres. The pumping station had the task of channeling the waste water from the neighbouring communities into the Hüller Bach and from there into the Emscher. With the end of coal mining, underground disposal became possible and the pumping station was decommissioned.

The pumping station is now being demolished. Artist Markus Jeschaunig is creating an installation on the partially backfilled foundations that sculpturally integrates various elements of the building: Part of a staircase will be preserved, three pipes will form a solar-powered fountain from which drops of water and sounds can be heard. A quarry forest is being created, a biotope made up of six black alder trees that like it wet and are reminiscent of the floodplain landscapes along the Emscher in pre-industrial times. On the paved forecourt, rainwater can be collected in a cistern via gutters and, together with a photovoltaic pergola, enables completely self-sufficient operation.

As an artistically remodelled ruin, Jeschaunig's work points to both the great technologies and the enormous ecological destruction that mining brought with it, and at the same time shows a way in which new life and climate-positive places can be created in the city.

Artist

Open Artsit

©Daniel Sadrowski

Markus Jeschaunig

Markus Jeschaunig works as an artist and architect, his projects combine art, natural sciences, ecology and activism.

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Dates

  • Open Event
    Group of cyclists on a tour along the Emscherkunstweg. The cyclists ride on a paved path next to a river, passing under a highway bridge, surrounded by green scenery.

    © Daniel Sadrowski

    So., 30.3.25, 12:30–15 hView

    Bike Tour to the Opening of Königsgrube

  • Open Event
    The former pumping station Königsgrube by Markus Jeschaunig is captured in a winter setting, highlighting its green industrial structures and historical significance.

    © Daniel Sadrowski

    So., 30.3.25, 15 hView

    Opening Königsgrube

Ennepetal

Begleitet wird die Grand Snail Tour von Künstler*innen aus dem Bereich Literatur, Fotografie und Illustration, die zeitgleich zum Aufenthalt des Tourmobils, Eindrücke und Reflexionen aus jeweils derselben Stadt sammeln und diese sie visuell oder literarisch ins Bild setzen. So entsteht ein Paratext zur 3-jährigen Tour, der in Form einer Reisechronik, ein Kaleidoskop an Geschichten, Verbindungen, Momentaufnahmen in den 53 Städten der Region als Gleichzeitigkeiten und Ungleichzeitigkeiten zur Grand Snail Tour sichtbar werden lässt.

- Learning From Ennepetal - , 2026
Buntstift,  Bleistift, Kleber auf Papier
61,5 x 43,5 cm
© Roman Häbler 

Joram Schön interessieren Landschaften als menschgemachte Natur- und Erfahrungsräume: Übergänge zwischen Architektur, Vegetation, Industrie und Infrastruktur, Verkehrs- und Bewegungsachsen wie Wasserwege, Straßen, Bahnstrecken und Lufträume, aber auch Ladenfassaden, Schaufenster, Typografie, grafische Gestaltungen, Imbisse und Innenräume – Orte des Alltags, in denen sich regionale Eigenheiten, soziale Dynamiken und zeitliche Spuren unmittelbar zeigen.

Stops

Open "Ennepetal"

© Amina Falah

16.4.26, 15–19 h

Gossiping in Ennepetal

Ennepetal

Artist

Open Artsit

Joram Schön

Joram Schön lives and works as a freelance artist and filmmaker in Berlin and Cologne. He studied fine art at Berlin University of the Arts and completed his master's degree in art and film at the Academy of Media Arts Cologne.

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