Shift in the shaft, but never in the heart.
⚒️ 14 floodlights. 14 mines. 14 stories.
This bar table was built from an original floodlight from the Parkstadion – made of real steel, which for 28 years shone light over the home of the FC Schalke 04 wore.
Carefully cleaned and restored , it still retains its traces. Every scratch and rust spot tells of great games, goals, tears, and triumphs. Of what makes Schalke what it is.
The frame is inspired by the old winding towers of Gelsenkirchen's mines. A symbol of Schalke's origins – from the Ruhr area, from work, from the community.
Schalke was built on coal. And that spirit lives on:
Work hard. Stick together. Never go under.
That is why each floodlight bears the name of a mine that was once in operation here.
13 of 14 - Westerholt Colliery
This floodlight is named after the Westerholt Colliery – a prominent mine on the city border between Gelsenkirchen and Herten. Mining began here in 1900, and Westerholt later grew into a state-of-the-art site with three shafts. Until its final closure in 2008, the colliery was a major employer in the region – for over a century.
In its heyday, Westerholt was more than just a workplace—it was the center of local life , with its own workshops, residential areas, and even a mine power plant. It remained actively operated until the end via a connection to the Lippe mine.
What remains is the site with its listed buildings – most notably the impressive headframe of Shaft 1, which still towers into the sky today. The area is currently being redesigned as the "New Westerholt Mine": a place for business, culture, and sustainable urban development.
➡️ 50% of the proceeds go directly to “Schalke hilft!” , the charitable foundation of FC Schalke 04.
➡️ The other 50% goes into the costly restoration and preservation of such historical monuments.
A donation receipt cannot be issued because this is an auction. 50 percent of the proceeds will be donated to Schalke hilft! following the auction. The floodlights show signs of wear due to their age.