Castanheiro Factory
Castanheiro Factory | |
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Fábrica do Castanheiro | |
![]() The factory's logo | |
![]() The Castanheiro Factory’s main entrance, January 2024. | |
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General information | |
Status | Partially demolished to build apartment buildings |
Type | Factory |
Location | Urgezes |
Town or city | Guimarães |
Country | Portugal |
Coordinates | 41°26′04″N 8°18′03″W / 41.43433°N 8.30074°W |
Construction started | 1883 |
Opened | 1851 |
Inaugurated | 1885 |
Demolished | 2022-2025 |
The Castanheiro Factory (Portuguese: Fábrica do Castanheiro) was a textile factory in Urgezes, Guimarães, inaugurated in 1851 and partially demolished between 2022 and 2025. It was the oldest and longest running factory still in operation in Guimarães until its closure in 2013.
Nomenclature
[edit]The name Fábrica do Castanheiro, translated to Factory of the Cork Oak, comes from the plot of land where the factory was built, named Lugar do Castanheiro (Place of the Cork Oak).[1] The origin of this place comes from a big and old Cork Oak that existed there, however, it was cut down at the end of the 20th century by order of the factory's manager at the time, but it's wood was preserved.[1]
History
[edit]It was founded by António da Costa Guimarães and started operations in 1851 via manual labor despite the firm being officially created in 1854 and rooting back to 1844.[2]
Construction of the current factory began in 1883 and operations commenced in 1885,[1][3] facilitated by the opening of the nearby train station the year prior.[4] By 1892, the year of Costa Guimarães’ death,[1] the factory had already undergone one substantial expansion, adding new workshops, a chimney, and water tanks, as well as a preliminary layout of working-class housing in front of the site, some of which still stand today.[1] Another structural expansion followed three years later, in 1895.[1]
António da Costa Guimarães participated in many important world fairs using products made at the Castanheiro Factory, including the 1873 Vienna World's Fair and the Centennial Exposition, where it received bronze medals, and the Exposition Universelle of 1878,1889 and 1900, where it received honorable mentions and a silver medal.[1] It also participated in some national fairs, Porto (1857), Braga (1863), Guimarães (1884) and Lisbon (1888).[1]

The Industrial Surveys of 1891 and 1896 mention that mechanical looms were already in use at the Castanheiro Factory, the first factory in the city to do so.[2] The electrification of the Castanheiro Factory began in 1912 and involved a new phase of expansion, this time to build the transformer cabins, being completed in 1915.[1]
The factory struggled during World War I, as many of its suppliers were German and had to leave the country, while many of its workers were conscripted in the Portuguese Expeditionary Corps to fight at the war front. Despite this, new suppliers were found in France, England and Switzerland,[1] and while the costs increased during this period, so did the profits. This led to a phase of modernization, expansion and specialization in the 1950s.[3]
By May 2019, the company was still in the state of insolvency and had already ceased all activity,[5] a process that began in December 2013 when the Guimarães Court issued the initial insolvency ruling[6] after many attempts of resolving the situation in the previous years,[7][8] just days before the previous owner, Alberto José Costa, died.[9] That year marked the closure of the Castanheiro Factory, after 127 years of continuous operation.[3] Demolition of the factory started in June 2022 to give place to a "residential complex" that adopted the name of the factory,[10] despite talks about preservation of the older parts of the building by the City Council.[11][12] The 18 million euro project was unveiled to the public in late 2022, featuring four six/seven story buildings planned for construction atop the section of the factory that, at the time, was already under demolition, and the integration and preservation of the old water tanks and part of the original wall.[13] The buildings were concluded in early 2025.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Nogueira, Paula R. (2017). ""Fábrica do Castanheiro: o motor da cidade industrial"- Estudos sobre o fundo histórico da firma António Costa Guimarães, Filho & C.a (1844- 1926)" (PDF). Amap. Retrieved 25 September 2024.
- ^ a b "Congresso histórico de Guimarães" (PDF). chi.guimaraes.pt. pp. 1–19. Retrieved 20 July 2024.
- ^ a b c "António da Costa Guimarães, Fº & Cª SA". archeevo.amap.pt. Retrieved 9 May 2025.
- ^ Aguilar, Busquets de (1 June 1949). "A Evolução História dos Transportes Terrestres em Portugal" [The History of Land Transport in Portugal] (PDF). Gazeta dos Caminhos de Ferro [Railway Gazette]. Vol. 62. pp. 383–393. Retrieved 19 January 2017 – via Hemeroteca Digital de Lisboa.
- ^ "António da Costa Guimarães, Filho & Companhia, S.A. - Em Liquidação". Racius. Archived from the original on 9 May 2025. Retrieved 9 May 2025.
- ^ "Tribunal declarou insolvente Fábrica do Castanheiro". GUIMARAESDIGITAL.COM (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 9 May 2025.
- ^ "Realiza-se hoje assembleia de credores da fábrica do Castanheiro". GUIMARAESDIGITAL.COM (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 9 May 2025.
- ^ "Trabalhadores do Castanheiro reúnem hoje em plenário". GUIMARAESDIGITAL.COM (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 9 May 2025.
- ^ "Faleceu em França o empresário Alberto José Costa". GUIMARAESDIGITAL.COM (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 9 May 2025.
- ^ "Castanheiro | Condomínio Fechado". Castanheiro (in Portuguese). Retrieved 10 May 2025.
- ^ "Arrancam as demolições para erguer habitação no Castanheiro". jornaldeguimaraes.pt. Retrieved 9 May 2025.
- ^ Geral. "Complexo habitacional vai «nascer» na antiga Fábrica do Castanheiro". GUIMARAESDIGITAL.COM (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 9 May 2025.
- ^ Geral. "Antiga fábrica do Castanheiro dá lugar a projecto residencial em Urgezes de 18M€". GUIMARAESDIGITAL.COM (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 9 May 2025.
External links
[edit]Media related to Fábrica do Castanheiro at Wikimedia Commons