Kolka Lighthouse

Kolka Lighthouse (Latvian: Kolkas bāka) is a lighthouse located in Irbe Strait, 5.2 kilometres (3.2 mi) off the Latvian coast on a specially created artificial island. The lighthouse guides ships around the dangerous Cape Kolka, at the eastern entrance to the Irbe Strait from the Gulf of Rīga.

Kolka Lighthouse
Kolkas bāka
Kolka Lighthouse
LocationIrbe Strait, Latvia
Coordinates57.80238°N 22.63462°E / 57.80238; 22.63462
Year first constructed1875
Automated1979
Foundation1873
Constructioncast iron
Tower shapeoctagonal seawalled island with red tower
Markings / patternred tower
Tower height21 metres (69 ft)
Focal height20 metres (66 ft)
Range10 nautical miles (19 km; 12 mi)
CharacteristicFl(2) W 10s
Admiralty numberC3478
NGA number12212
ARLHS numberLAT-006[1]
Latvia numberUZ-410[2]
HeritageNational industrial monument 

History

A pair of range lights was built on the point of the cape in 1818 to guide ships around the offshore shoals. These proved inadequate so a lightship station was established in 1858. A temporary wooden lighthouse was lit offshore in 1875, well before completion of the permanent iron tower, which was built in Saint Petersburg[3] and delivered by sea in parts.

Originally the artificial island was built closer to the coast, but due to damage to Kolka beach, the Cape Kolka is constantly being washed out. The island was built in the winters 1873-1875 by bringing big stones from the coast via ice road. The area of the island is about 2000 square meters. Historical names are Domesnäs, Domes Ness or Домеснес.

gollark: So, now all missiles have EMP shielding?
gollark: EMP?
gollark: Clearly what we need is stupidly densely packed shielding.
gollark: WHY? !OJ!OI$JO !!
gollark: Yes, I did, it works brilliantly.

See also

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.