Saltworks Museum in Prešov
The Salt Plant in Prešov is a national cultural monument and is considered to be one of the most important technical monuments in Slovakia. It is a unique complex of technical objects dating from the 17th century used for pumping and cooking salt from brine. The facilities for the rock salt mining and the brine extraction in the Salt Plant include, in particular, the Leopold shaft, a brine storage (here known as četerňa), a smelter, a brewery, a salt warehouse (chambers), a blacksmith’s workshops and a tower (here known as turňa).
The original complex of the former basin Salt Plant was accompanied by other buildings, such as salt baths, engine room, depot and others. Basically, these are only buildings without the appropriate technical equipment and basic inventory. For the sake of completeness, the tower (turňa) has to be mentioned – the bell tower, which in older times served as a signal for various activities in towns. It is built on a hill – bank. By knocking on the board, it was announced to the miners, resp. employees of the state company the beginning of working hours and other significant events, breaking news or incidents (natural disasters). The tower ended its role after the First World War.
In 2016, in the national cultural monument Solivar a building was opened to the general public – a salt warehouse, which became a ruin since the fire in 1986. It no longer serves its original purpose, which was salt storage and distribution, but it becomes an interesting functional space with multiple ways of its use. The reconstructed building houses the largest historically rare central hall, which leads to the individual premises – the former salt chambers. These are divided into a museum part, a congress area and an economic part, which is assigned for office, catering and hygienic spaces. The warehouse tower, which is dominated by a functional clock and a bell, was also restored.
The area of the salt plant “The Old Salt Plant” from the turn of the 18th and 19th centuries has been preserved as a unique technical monument, which has no competitor in the field of technical monuments of a similar kind in Slovakia. We owe the construction and prosperity of this factory to a large extent to the government and business strategy of the Habsburgs. It was built with the help of imperial experts and the work skills and perseverance of the local population.
Increasing demand for salt constantly forced the plant management to address the issue of increasing the plant’s production capacity. After futile attempts to modernize the old salt plant (František and Ferdinand breweries) did not increase the production capacity and the production remained at about 6,000 tons of salt per year. The modern history of saltworks in Slovakia begins with the construction of a new state salt plant called “President Masaryk”. The construction of the factory lasted from 1921 to 1925 and the plant was put into operation on March 7, 1925. The production capacity was set at 12,000 tonnes of table salt per year in a continuous 24-hour operation.
The products can be used on the domestic market in the medical industry in the production of infusion solutions and in the photochemical industry. The production of fragrant bath salts has begun, as well. Initial production of 30 tons of bath salt in 1978 increased to 1,725 tons of bath salt in 1990.In 1998, The Salt Plant in Prešov ended in a loss due to an unfinished investment, got into a bad financial situation and the construction of the processing factory in Zbudza municipality was stopped. The Salt Plant, as an investor, was led to mutual litigation with the general contractor and the project manager. In 2002, the Novácke chemie závody company became the owner of The Salt Plant. The situation created by the bad investment did not resolve itself even after this owner change. Subsequently, Solivary a.s. Prešov (The Salt Plant Company) went bankrupt. On Saturday, May 16, 2009, the factory was definitively closed, 155 employees lost their jobs and salt mining in The Salt Plant was terminated. Technological equipment, which could still be used, was dismantled and removed from the production factory in Prešov, and other technological parts and structures were disposed of. The resumption of production at the factory in Prešov is more than unlikely owing to this reason, as well. Empty buildings are still standing as a fraction of the reminder of history and salt production in this region. The unoccupied salt market, which has been protected by a salt monopoly for centuries and which helped to build a salt factory, was not a problem to cover in today’s open economy. Back in 2009, an Austrian salt appeared on the Slovak market, packaged and sold under the Prešov brand (note: the registration mark was bought by the Austrian company).