Home Home Town Genealogy   Features   Bricks UGotmail Leisure

Cheap Phone

Links Contact us
Shopping Computers Birds of Prey Memories Trams Humour Poetry Holidays

 Places to see

  Leisure  
clear gif

This page has moved to www.monklands.co.uk/summerlee/

Summerlee Heritage Park

Summerlee closed on Sunday 22 October 2006 for a major Heritage Lottery Fund supported redevelopment.

It will remain closed until spring 2008 while the main exhibition hall is completed renovated with new interactive displays and working exhibits.

On re-opening, there will be a new cafe, kid's discovery zone, meeting rooms and a viewing pod overlook the historic ironworks site.

In the meantime why not visit the Trams on line? See them AND hear them MOVE.  Click below

Summerlee Transport Group
(The Trams)

The Summerlee Heritage park is a museum of social and Industrial history.

 "The aim of the Museum is to preserve and interpret the history of the local Iron, Steel, Coal and engineering industries and of the communities that depended on them for a living"

Facilities and Services
  • Ironworks Gallery
  • Tramway with Passenger Stops
  • Exhibition Hall
  • Mine and Miners' Row
  • Summerlee Branch of the Monklands Canal
  • Children's Play Area
  • Site of former Summerlee Ironworks
  • Site of Steam-driven Sawmill

As the history of the Monklands is inextricably linked with the Industrial Revolution, it was deemed appropriate that the heart of Coatbridge, "The Iron Burgh" should be the site of Scotland's most exciting museum project. Summerlee Heritage Trust is a major museum on a once derelict 25-acre site on the banks of the Monkland Canal, centred on the archaeological excavations of the Summerlee Iron Works.

The park is designed around the archaeological remains of the Summerlee Ironworks which emerged from under six metres of slag and industrial waste.
Summerlee Ironworks
was put into blast in 1835.  It was served by a branch of the Monklands canal which has now been restored.  Howes Basin - built for shipping coal from the railway to the canal - has been uncovered. Part of the site had been used since the 1950s by a crane manufacturer - Hyrocon Cranes -the framework of their factory was stripped, repaired and reclad to form the Museum's impressive Exhibition Hall. 


Summerlee has been described as "Scotland's Noisiest Museum" and the massive exhibition hall houses a large collection of historic machinery operating daily!.  Whenever possible, Summerlee's engineers provide public demonstrations of machinery and traditional skills whilst making parts for other restoration projects.  Permanent exhibitions include reconstructed working environments such as a Tinsmiths Shop, a Brass Foundry, Brassfinishers Shop, Spade Forge.   Other exhibits include a Co-op Shop, a Bicycle and Radio Shop,  a Photographers Studio.  Summerlee Ironworks in the 1880s is reconstructed to scale - showing the blast furnace structure with a viewing balcony. 
The most interesting part of the Museum is the excavated "remains" of the Ironworks - its all outdoors and shows the foundations of the furnaces and the heating kilns. The Ironworks was demolished in the late 1930's and some six feet of soil had to be removed to find the old iron workings.

Tramway
Summerlee operates an electric tramway on over half a kilometre of track..  A number of trams are operational on a daily basis including one from Austria and one from Belgium.  An open topped Lanarkshire Tram was first unveiled to the general public in 1995. Many of the trams are both driven and restored by the Summerlee Transport Group.   The only reconstruction that is missing is the 1950's conductress shouting "Come oan - Git aff".

Historic Vehicles
Dotted around the museum are a number of stationery vehicles including three steam railway locomotives, two steam cranes and a bulldozer c1930. There are some vintage or classic cars including a Model T van and an Austin A40 pickup van.

Mines and Miners Row
Local mines once fired the furnaces of ironworks such as Summerlee.  A small mine has been re-created where you can experience the miner's dark, damo and cramped  working conditions as they battled to win a day's pay for their families.  The nearby row of miners cottages shows a little of how they lived.  They take you from the basic living conditions of the 1860's to the relative comforts of the 1960's.

ALL ENQUIRIES to:

Summerlee Heritage Park
Heritage Way
Coatbridge ML5 1QD
Tel :  01236 431261

Click on Summerlee Heritage Park for a local map

We have also added directions from Glasgow and Stirling - 

From Glasgow take M8
Continue straight ahead onto COATBRIDGE ROAD
Continue straight ahead onto GLASGOW ROAD
Bear left onto BANK STREET
Bear left onto A89
Turn left onto WEST CANAL STREET
Turn right onto HERITAGE WAY
Continue straight ahead onto HERITAGE VIEW
Arrive at Summerlee Heritage Park
 
From Stirling area - straight ahead onto M80
Straight ahead onto A80
Bear right onto M80
Bear left onto A73

After STAND village - Bear right onto COATBRIDGE ROAD B803

Continue via WAVERLEY STREET and BURNBANK STREET

Continue straight ahead onto SUNNYSIDE ROAD

Bear left on SUNNYSIDE ROAD

At COATBRIDGE FOUNTAIN bear right onto WEST CANAL STREET

Turn right onto HERITAGE WAY

Continue straight ahead onto HERITAGE VIEW
Arrive at Summerlee Heritage Park

ALL ENQUIRIES to:  Summerlee Heritage Park   01236 431261

Copyright © Monklands
Online
2000-2007

Use up arrow to go to top of Seniors Network pages

Web design Sennet


Make this my Homepage