New Visitor Centre Opens at Masson Mills

A new visitor centre has been opened at Masson Mills. Part of the mills complex, which sits within the Derwent Valley World Heritage Site, was previously occupied by a retail village which was forced to shut at the start of the pandemic in 2020 and never recovered. However, the textile museum remained open for tour bookings. The mills were bought by the Derwent Hydro group of companies, a business owned by the Needle family which has operated hydropower stations since the 1980s, in 2022.

The new visitor centre, which was once the manager’s officers, is accessible at the front, roadside, of the building and has an array of historic mill-related artefacts, photographs, and equipment, and is open Monday to Friday, 11am to 4pm. Guided tours of the mill and its working machinery are now available every weekday at 2pm. Visitors are encouraged to book in advance to avoid missing out but walk-ins will be possible subject to space.

Jamie Needle, director at Masson Mills and Derwent Hydro, said: “It’s really exciting to be able to welcome people back through the doors to learn more about the history of industry in the World Heritage Site. There is nothing like being able to hear and touch the old machinery to illustrate the realities of early factory working. Our business started with water power and it’s hugely significant to me that factories also began with water power, this museum brings the two together in a fantastically tangible way.”

The new owners are also improving the existing hydropower scheme at the mill, which was installed in 1995. The entire site is supplied with renewable energy produced by its hydroelectric turbines with any surplus fed into the National Grid. The hydroelectricity produced emits no emissions to air, land or water, thereby minimising the carbon footprint of Masson Mills and those visiting the site.

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