Aruba Has A Side Most Travelers Miss, With Abandoned Gold Ruins, Remote Landscapes, And A Real Piece Of Caribbean History

By: - April 26th, 2026
aruba has new flights from frontier
The "wild" east coast of Aruba.

Bushiribana stands along Aruba’s northern coastline, its pale stone walls broken into sections that face open water and black rock below. Portions of the arches remain intact, framing long stretches of horizon, while other parts have fallen into uneven lines across the ground. The surface shows years of wind and salt, worn into a rough, textured finish.

You step into the mill directly from the surrounding terrain. No gates, no formal entrance. The ground shifts between packed earth and scattered stone as you pass through open archways that once defined working areas.

Changes in elevation separate different sections. Thick walls mark where heavy equipment likely stood. Open corridors trace the movement of material through the site.

Beyond the structure, the coastline runs wide and exposed. Waves strike the rock with force, sending spray toward the base of the ruins. There is no calm shoreline here. Everything about the environment aligns with durability and function.

This is one of the most direct connections to Aruba’s gold past, and it remains exactly where it was built.

The Discovery That Defined The Era

Gold was discovered in Aruba in 1824, setting off a period of exploration that spread across the island. Prospectors moved through rocky terrain, working hills and exposed formations in search of deposits that could sustain production.

The industry eventually produced more than 3 million pounds of gold, a number that reshaped the island’s economy during the nineteenth century.

Extraction alone was not enough. The process required facilities capable of refining ore into usable gold. That need led to the construction of mills positioned strategically across the island.

Two of those mills remain today, each tied to a different part of Aruba’s geography.

Bushiribana And The North Coast Operation

Bushiribana Gold Mill processed ore brought from nearby mining areas inland. Its placement along the north coast allowed for proximity to those sites while supporting the movement of materials beyond the island.

The structure reflects its purpose. Elevated platforms suggest where machinery once operated. Open channels indicate how ore likely moved through different stages of processing. The thickness of the stone walls shows the need for stability under constant use.

You walk through multiple sections of the mill, stepping over uneven stone and moving between spaces that once held equipment and workers. The building stands fully exposed now, with no separation between interior and exterior.

The coastline reinforces that exposure. Jagged rock formations line the edge of the island, with water striking against them continuously. There are no sheltered areas nearby, no soft entry into the sea.

Everything at Bushiribana points to production under demanding conditions.

Balashi And The Lagoon Corridor

On the southeastern side of the island, Balashi Gold Mill presents a different environment shaped by its position near the Spanish Lagoon.

The remains appear in sections of stone that outline the original processing site. Compared to Bushiribana, the layout requires closer attention to understand. Foundations, partial walls, and elevation changes define the space.

The surrounding terrain includes tighter rock formations and pockets of greenery near the water. The presence of the lagoon introduces still water into the scene, a contrast to the constant motion along the north coast.

Nearby, Frenchman’s Pass cuts through a narrow corridor of rock. This natural feature has long influenced movement across the island, and the mill’s placement aligns with that geography.

You move through Balashi on foot, tracing the outlines of the site and observing how it fits into the surrounding landscape.

Arikok And The Miralamar Mines

The origin of Aruba’s gold industry lies inland within Arikok National Park, where the Miralamar gold mines remain.

The terrain here shifts immediately. Dry ground stretches across the park, covered with cactus, loose stone, and exposed rock surfaces. Trails lead through areas where mining activity once took place.

Instead of large structures, the evidence appears in smaller forms. Openings in rock indicate where digging occurred. Surfaces show signs of being worked and altered. Subtle variations in the terrain reveal where material was removed.

You follow these details across the landscape, identifying the points where prospectors extracted ore.

Miralamar represents the beginning of the process. Material from these sites traveled to mills like Bushiribana and Balashi for processing.

Together, the mines and mills form a connected system across the island.

How To Experience Aruba’s Gold Trail

Visiting these sites creates a clear path through Aruba’s gold history.

You begin at Bushiribana, where the structure provides an immediate sense of scale and function. From there, you head toward Balashi, where the terrain shifts and the mill integrates into a different environment.

Arikok National Park adds the mining component, requiring time on foot and attention to the landscape.

Each site stands independently, but together they create a complete picture of extraction and processing during Aruba’s gold rush.

There are no large visitor installations guiding the experience. The sites rely on what remains in place — stone, ground, and layout.

You move through them, observe the details, and connect the sequence yourself.

Getting To Aruba

Reaching Aruba is straightforward, with direct flights from major cities across the United States, including Miami, New York, Atlanta, and Charlotte. Most routes arrive at Queen Beatrix International Airport in Oranjestad, the island’s main gateway.

From Miami, flight time is just over 2.5 hours, making Aruba one of the more accessible southern Caribbean destinations from the East Coast.

Once on the island, driving provides the most flexibility for reaching the gold sites. Rental cars are widely available at the airport, and road access to BushiribanaBalashi, and Arikok National Park is clearly marked.

The drive to Bushiribana from the airport takes roughly 25 minutes, heading north and then east along the coast. Balashi sits about 15 minutes southeast of Oranjestad, while Arikok National Park spans a larger inland area and can be entered from multiple points.

A full day allows time to visit all three.

Where To Stay Near The Gold Sites

The closest major resort base to Bushiribana and the north coast sites is The Ritz-Carlton, Aruba, located in the Palm Beach area.

The property places you within a short drive of the island’s northeastern coastline, making it one of the most convenient high-end options for exploring the gold mill at Bushiribana.

Rooms feature private balconies facing the Caribbean, with views extending across the resort’s pools and beachfront. On-site dining includes BLT Steak, a modern steakhouse with ocean-facing tables, and Casa Nonna New York, serving Italian dishes in a refined indoor-outdoor space. The resort also includes a full-service spa, a large beachfront pool area, and direct beach frontage along one of Aruba’s most well-known stretches of sand.

From the hotel, you reach Bushiribana in under 20 minutes by car, making it easy to combine a morning visit to the ruins with an afternoon back on the beach.

For access to Balashi and Arikok, Palm Beach remains a central base, with drives ranging from 20 to 35 minutes depending on your route.

Why This Side Of Aruba Stays With You

Aruba’s beaches and resorts define its reputation, but the gold sites reveal a different layer of the island’s identity.

They show a period shaped by extraction, labor, and the development of systems to process natural resources. They show how geography influenced industry, from inland mines to coastal mills.

The remains are still present across the island. Stone walls, altered terrain, and defined pathways provide direct evidence of that era.

You walk through these places in their original locations, tracing the path from mine to mill.

By the time you return to the coast, Aruba holds a different context — one grounded in what still stands across its landscape

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