The H. Poelzig mining tower and the tower tower were erected on the premises of the Polish Coal Mine, previously known as Germany and Deutschland. The mine was established in 1873 by joining several mining fields in the area of today's city of Świętochłowice (Śląskie Voivodeship), and its first owner was a Silesian industrial magnate Guido Henckel von Donnersmarck, who - incidentally - was a baron and count of the German Empire. The official name of the mine until 1922 was Deutschland, then (until 1937) Germany, and finally from 1937 - Poland. After World War II, the mine continued to operate, and in 1972 it was merged with the Prezydent mine, but retained its name from 1937. The mine operated until the end of the 1990s, and its official closure took place in 2000. The monuments of this mine are the restored shaft towers I and II, known as the tower tower and the tower H. Poelzig, which were built in the years 1884-1887. Their task was to service the mine levels 180 and 225 meters underground. Tower number I has a steel structure and has four storeys. The last of them is "overhung" and it is in it that the hoisting machine is located. In the second tower, a steel structure was also used, but a trestle structure. It was founded on four supports set at an angle, which is rather rare in Upper Silesia. Currently, both towers are on the Industrial Monuments Route.
The models are digitally printed - some adhesives can dissolve the ink!
Paint in digital printing can be dissolved by certain types of adhesives like butaprene and similar on the same solvents. Before bonding, it is advisable to try the adhesive used on a barely visible part of the model.