Article 
Anchor points and the European 
Route of  
Industrial Heritage
    The European Route of Industrial Heritage 
    came about in an attempt to create themed routes allowing the discovery of 
    industrial heritage sites by topic, by region or in other ways. It is 
    connected with the promotion of these as tourist attractions. While 
    appealing to local areas and specialities, it also attempts to highlight the 
    parallel or sequential development steps that were occurring in different 
    European countries, one often developing out of another. 
    It covers, as at August 2009, 845 
    sites in 29 European countries. 213 of these locations are in the UK. 
    In each country there are regional routes, 
    in Britain there are 4:- 
    
      - 
      
      Northwest England  
      - 
      
      Heart of England  
      - 
      
      East of England  
      - 
      
      South Wales  
     
    There are 10 themed routes across Europe 
    covering:- 
    
      - 
      
Mining: The treasures of the 
      Earth  
      - 
      
Iron & Steel: The glow of the 
      blast furnaces  
      - 
      
Textiles: From fibre to fabrique  
      - 
      
Production: Goods for the world  
      - 
      
Energy: What makes us go  
      - 
      
Transport & Communication: The 
      tracks of the Industrial Revolution  
      - 
      
Water: Blue Gold  
      - 
      
Housing & Architecture  
      - 
      
Service & Leisure Industry  
      - 
      
Industrial Landscapes  
     
    All of the sites that are in the UK we have 
    listed in
European Route of Industrial 
    Heritage - UK Sites.  
    
    
    Anchor Points on the European Route of 
    Industrial Heritage The 66 Anchor 
    Points are the principle places that offer either specifically important 
    historic features or are particularly attractive to visitors and go across 
    both themes and countries. Of the 66, 27 are within the UK. You can see a 
    full list of the anchor points 
    
      across 
    countries on their website. In our listing 
European Route of Industrial 
    Heritage - UK Sites, 
  we have  produced a listing of all the sites that are within the UK, and 
    highlighted those that are anchor points with links to both the individual 
    websites  and those within our location guides. 
    Anchor points cover a complete range of 
    industries and most, if not all, have more for tourists with guided tours, 
    multi media presentations and more and in many cases are the centrepiece or 
    a part of a local industrial area, with other attractions. 
    There is a partial overlap between 
    anchor points and places that are featured in the
    
    World Heritage Sites 
    
  
    listing.
    
     Many of the anchor points are covered by 
    location guides, and these are linked within the 
European Route of Industrial 
    Heritage - UK Sites, 
  listing. 
      
          
                
                  
    
    The Iron Bridge
    
    
     
    at Ironbridge, Shropshire  
    Topic areas, our indexes and Location 
    Guides As Industrial Heritage 
    goes across a very wide number of industries, historic periods and 
    structures, we don't have industrial heritage within our topic listing under 
    heritage but instead have a range of topics under heritage that covers these 
    areas. In many cases the industrial topics are easy to spot in the heritage 
    classification, and would also be the sub headings that you could break 
    industrial heritage down into.  
     Historically prior to the industrial 
    revolution, industrial activities were a part of communities, and we have 
    generally not indexed these away from but included them in the topic areas, 
    so for example Roman covers all activities relating to the period the Romans 
    were in Britain. Going right back to the Neolithic period you will find 
    mention of industrial activity, but usually as a part of a village or 
    community, only later do we have identifiable specifics like windmills, 
    bridges, and the like. We also have a heading of living history museums that 
    often contain a wide range of items relating to a place or time and as such 
    include one or a number of industrial exhibits. 
        |