Cart
0
Historic engine house overlooking rolling countryside in the Cornwall & West Devon Mining Landscape UNESCO World Heritage Site, South West England.

Cornwall & West Devon Mining Landscape UNESCO World Heritage Site – Engine Houses, Moorland Routes, and Atlantic Cliffs

Industrial Heritage, Open Moorland, and Coastal Mining Trails

The Cornwall & West Devon Mining Landscape is one of England’s most distinctive places for self-guided travel, shaped by walking routes, varied landscapes, and small historic places scattered between rugged Atlantic cliffs, open moorland, and wooded river valleys. Sections of the South West Coast Path, the Mineral Tramways, and numerous local paths link engine houses, former mine workings, harbours, and villages such as St Just, St Agnes, Hayle, and the Tamar Valley, allowing walkers to move gradually through a landscape where industry and countryside are inseparable.

Rather than a single site, the UNESCO designation covers ten separate areas across Cornwall and West Devon. Clifftop paths pass abandoned engine houses set above the sea, inland routes cross Bodmin Moor’s open ridges and granite outcrops, and quiet valley tracks follow rivers once used to power mines and mills. The terrain shifts constantly between coast, moor, and woodland, giving each section a different character.

Walking here feels layered and atmospheric. Stone ruins sit against wide skies, mine stacks rise unexpectedly from heath and grassland, and harbours and cottages remain part of everyday life. The landscape is both historic and lived-in, where the marks of industry remain embedded in the land rather than preserved behind barriers.

About the UNESCO World Heritage Site

The Cornwall & West Devon Mining Landscape was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2006 for its global importance in the development of tin and copper mining. From the eighteenth to nineteenth centuries, this region led advances in mining technology, engineering, and transport, exporting expertise around the world.

Today, engine houses, tramways, quays, miners’ cottages, and abandoned workings remain visible across the countryside. Together they form a rare cultural landscape where settlement, industry, and terrain evolved side by side. Walking through the area reveals how deeply mining shaped both the land and the communities that depended on it.

Where to Walk

South West Coast Path (Mining Sections)

Clifftop walking near St Just, Botallack, St Agnes, and Porthtowan, with engine houses set dramatically above the Atlantic.

Mineral Tramways Trails

A largely traffic-free network following former industrial railways between Portreath and Devoran, offering gentle gradients and wide open views.

Tamar Valley Paths

Wooded riverside routes linking orchards, quays, and historic mining settlements along the Cornwall–Devon border.

Caradon Hill & Bodmin Moor

Open moorland tracks connecting quarries, mine remains, and expansive upland viewpoints.

Highlights

  • Cliff-top engine houses at Wheal Coates, Botallack, and Levant
  • A UNESCO-listed industrial landscape spread across coast, moorland, and valley
  • Former tramways repurposed as quiet walking and cycling routes
  • Historic harbour towns including Charlestown and Hayle
  • Wide Atlantic views, granite uplands, and wooded river valleys
  • A rare combination of heritage and open countryside

Frequently Asked Questions

What makes the Cornwall & West Devon Mining Landscape a UNESCO World Heritage Site?

It is recognised for its global significance in the history of tin and copper mining and for the way industry shaped the surrounding landscape and settlements.

Is it one single location?

No. The designation covers ten separate areas across Cornwall and West Devon, each representing different aspects of the region’s mining history.

Can you walk between mining sites?

Yes. Coastal paths, tramways, and local trails connect many of the key locations, making the area well suited to walking in sections.

Are there easier routes available?

Yes. The Mineral Tramways and valley paths offer gentler terrain, while the coast and moorland sections are more exposed.

When is the best time to visit?

Spring through autumn offers the most settled weather. Winter walks can feel quieter and more dramatic along the coast and moors.