Hoge Kempen

Photo by Els Slots.

Hoge Kempen Rural - Industrial Transition Landscape is part of the Tentative list of Belgium in order to qualify for inclusion in the World Heritage List.

The Hoge Kempen Cultural Landscape is a mixed heritage, combining a river sediment cone from the last Ice Age with a 19th century industrial landscape. Rocks deposited by the Meuse were covered by sand blown by sea winds and later eroded into a deep valley. The proposed site also includes the garden cities of Winterslag, Waterschei, Zwartberg and Eisden.

Map of Hoge Kempen

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The coordinates shown for all tentative sites were produced as a community effort. They are not official and may change on inscription.

Community Reviews

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Clyde

Malta - 28-Jun-20 -

Hoge Kempen Rural - Industrial Transition Landscape (T) by Clyde

In June 2020 I visited a number of locations of this tentative WHS up for inscription in 2022, namely Eisden, Maasmechelen, Connecterra, Terhills and Mechelse Heide. I had already visited the area several times previously but for shopping and the nearby Herentals Belfry.

Terhills and Connecterra have a visitor centre (entrance 3 euros) which were closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. However, the various hiking trails are open 24/7 so I mainly visited to have a closer look at the pithead frame of the former Eisden mine (possible to climb for a panoramic view - not worth the effort), and what is marketed as “the most beautiful view in Flanders” at Connecterra which has retained four of the spoil-tips, three of which are accessible. Their green tops offer a worthwhile view of the landscape surrounding Terhills, the beautiful ponds and the peaks in Belgium's only national park. The view of the surrounding landscape is remarkable mostly because nature claimed back this large industrial area (in an otherwise flat landscape) but not worth travelling for. The huge shopping outlet, and especially the nuclear plant in the distance, are still quite an eyesore, and even in Belgium itself, there are better nature reserves for nature panoramic views such as Het Zwin just outside Knokke.

After a long road trip, we had planned to enjoy a short hike and picnic at another "highlight" of this tentative WHS, the Mechelse Heide. There's a free parking lot and information boards at the entrance, no entrance fee, and already a tentative WHS plaque gearing up for inscription. It seems to be a popular place among locals who love mountainbiking. We went for the blue trail which was relatively easy and on a sunny day hiking shoes are not necessary. The highlights during our visit were the purple/pink heathlands partially in bloom (even though usually best time is mid-August to mid-September) and the 360 degree panoramic views over the former gravel and sand pits.

The views reminded me of similar landscapes to be had in Zollverein WHS, Germany and even around the Wallonia Mining Sites in Belgium itself, even though nature here seems to be easily taking over when compared to the other inscribed sites. I don't think that the site has any OUV to warrant inscription. That said, I wouldn't be surprised if it eventually gets inscribed seeing how other industrial WHS got inscribed recently such as the one in Indonesia. 


Peter Alleblas

The Netherlands - 25-Feb-19 -

Hoge Kempen Rural - Industrial Transition Landscape (T) by Peter Alleblas

The last week of february it feeled like spring in The Netherlands. That was for me a good opportunity to visit Hoge Kempen National Parc. For me it was “only” 2.5 hours driving from home. There are 6 locations to enter the parc. I choose for Mechelse Heide and Connecterra. At 10.30 AM I arrived at the little parking Mechelse Heide, I thought I am the only one there, but the opposite was true, the parking was almost full. A lot of people where hiking and cycling in the surroundings. I decided to hike with my parents the most simple trail, the blue route. After the pleasant hike I drove 6 km north to the site Connecterra where the visitor center is from the Hoge Kempen. Very close to the entrance of Connecterra there is a huge shopping place (Maasmechelen Village). Els wrote about it in the the review below. I came also not for shopping, but with a parking place of more then 1600 parkings, it was no problem to park my car at noon. And there are public and clean toilets in de shopping street. I walked in 5 minuts to the entrance of the new visitor center Connecterra. I paid the fee of 3 euro. You can get (buy) hike maps or books  and pay the fee and thats it. There is also a terrace. I expected more inside the building. For example a very little exhibition about the history and background of the parc. But I came for the parc , and again I decided to hike the most simple trail, the blue route. After an hour or so when I came back by the entrance I was satisfied with the two locations I visited and at 2.30 PM I drove back home to The Netherlands.


Els Slots

The Netherlands - 17-Oct-17 -

Hoge Kempen Rural - Industrial Transition Landscape (T) by Els Slots

Belgium is currently preparing the 2019 nomination for Hoge Kempen Rural - Industrial Transition Landscape. This is going to be proposed as a mixed site ánd evolutionary cultural landscape. It covers the Hoge Kempen National Park plus .. more. To me it’s unclear which locations will comprise the core zone, but additionally to the park the garden cities of Winterslag, Waterschei, Zwartberg and Eisden seem to be included.

The core zone will be centred around Maasmechelen, a municipality of 37,000 inhabitants known for its coalmining history. Maasmechelen nowadays also is well-known even across the border in the Netherlands for its Outlet Shopping Center (attracting over 2 million people a year): ‘Maasmechelen Village’ was constructed on the grounds of the former mine of Eisden.

I did not come to shop obviously, but to get a grasp of this potential WHS. For its natural values I prepared a visit to Hoge Kempen National Park. The park only exists since 2006, and commercial exploitation seems to be a big issue here too. There are 6 designated access points to the park, but most have been spiced up to include attractions such as dog parks, miniature golf courts or a planetarium. I eventually choose the ‘Mechelse Heide’. This is mostly heathland, where a few easy hiking trails have been laid out. I walked the 5.5km long blue route, which has distant views on a former sand and gravel quarry.

The site’s natural value is geological: here you can find river sediments of the last Ice Ages – sand, gravel, pebbles. This is said to be the best-kept example of glacial formation effects from that period in Europe. I cannot really say that my hike brought me closer to seeing, let alone understanding, this. There’s no interpretation along the trail, and most of it goes through a rather nondescript forest. I was even less successful at another access point, Station As. Here I followed a short trail that should reach the wall of a former gravel quarry where you can see the different deposits since the Ice Age. No “wall” was found by me however!

It’s a long story getting from the natural circumstances to the cultural landscape, which is the other pillar of this proposed WHS. Due to the sand and gravel, the agricultural value of this area was poor and it was mostly used for keeping cows and sheep. However, coal was discovered in the ground and the area was quickly turned around into an industrial economic system. This system came with changes in the landscape (slag heaps etc), migration from other parts of Europe and specific facilities such as housing for the miners. It even became the subject of 19th-century, Western European landscape painting (a favourite spot for plein air painting). This broad scope is reflected in the proposed criteria for inscription, and I can already see IUCN and ICOMOS lamenting about the lack of focus.

On my way back home I drove via the garden quarter of Eisden, considered to be the most beautiful example of the Garden City concept on the European continent. This is not exactly a neighbourhood with homes for poor miners’ families. Spacious villas and public buildings were constructed in a leafy suburb. They’re now often converted into restaurants (and even a casino), or are in private use so that it felt a bit awkward to stop the car and take photos. There are a number of pretty buildings though, such as the huge ‘mining cathedral’, the parish house, the school and the house of a mining engineer.


Full Name
Hoge Kempen Rural - Industrial Transition Landscape
Country
Belgium
Added
2011
Type
Mixed
Categories
Cultural Landscape - Relict Natural landscape - Eroded
Link
By ID
2019 Requested by State Party to not be examined

Withdrawn by Belgium after ICOMOS advice not to inscribe

2011 Added to Tentative List

The site has 1 locations

Hoge Kempen Rural - Industrial Transition Landscape (T)
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