Borkener Seenland The "Stockelache Nature Bathing Lake", the Singlis surfing lake and the
Borkener See nature reserve use the old coal-mining lands for
tourism with a broad choice of activities ranging from bathing,
swimming and diving to
beach volleyball, windsurfing and Aqua-Golf, to
recreation,
hiking, and nature watching.
Hessian Brown Coal Mining Museum The Hessian Brown Coal Mining Museum, founded in 1992, presents under the theme of "Discover industrial culture – experience landscape change" many exhibits from coal-mining and electrical generation, whose workings are demonstrated for visitors. These exhibits include the underground and above-ground mining of the raw material, brown coal, its use, and the conversion of the former mining lands as the centrepiece. The visitor may choose from among four museum areas: • In the 3.5 ha experience-oriented "Coal & Energy"
theme park, rattling excavators, humming turbines and smoking power station kettles show how coal was mined from the pits, and how it was used for energy. • A reconstructed gallery displays the miners' work and everyday lives, and shows through original equipment the change in mining procedures. • A permanent exhibition presents the 400-year history of Hessian brown coal mining. • The "Borkener See" nature conservation information centre explains how "second-hand" landscapes are fashioned from former
strip mining areas. The visitors' mine and the "mining history" exhibit are housed in Borken's oldest building, "Am Amtsgericht" – built in 1473 – in the Old Town. The "Coal & Energy" theme park and the adjoining "Borkener See" nature conservation information centre are found
Am Freilichtmuseum ("At the Open-Air Museum") before the town's gates.
Great power plant Borken The Borken power plant building, which still stands today is protected as a
monument. It was built in 1922‒1923 by the famous industrial architects
Werner Issel and
Walter Klingenberg. == Constituent communities ==