Phare du Portzic

The phare du Portzic is situated on the north-eastern extremity of the Goulet de Brest (Finistère, France) and is the nearest lighthouse to the town of Brest. It was inscribed as a monument historique before 1987.[2] On the seaward side of the bottleneck entrance to the goulet, the lighthouse faces the Pointe des Espagnols.

Portzic Lighthouse Rear Range
Phare du Portzic
= The lighthouse from the sea in January 2006
Portzic Lighthouse Rear Range
Phare du Portzic
Location within Finistère
Portzic Lighthouse Rear Range
Phare du Portzic
Portzic Lighthouse Rear Range
Phare du Portzic (France)
LocationGoulet de Brest
Finistère
France
Coordinates48°21′30.0″N 4°32′03.0″W
Year first constructed1848
Automated1984
Constructiongranite tower
Tower shapeoctagonal tower with balcony and lantern
Markings / patternunpainted tower, red lantern
Tower height35 metres (115 ft)
Focal height56 metres (184 ft)
Light sourcemains power
Range20 nmi (37 km)
CharacteristicOc (2) WR 12s.
Admiralty numberD0790.1
NGA number0160
ARLHS numberFRA-034
France numberFR-0655[1]
Heritagebien recensé dans l'inventaire général du patrimoine culturel 

It was built on military land in 1848, at the same time as the phare du Petit Minou (started slightly earlier to the north of the Goulet. It was electrified in 1953 and automated in 1984 (though a semaphore post set up at its base in 1987 to regulate traffic in and out of the goulet is still permanently manned).

Characteristics

  • Signals: 1 main light for the sector with 2 flashes every 10 seconds (2 second flash then 6 second flash), accompanied by 2 twinkling directional lights in the direction of the Goulet, one continuous (one flash per second, known as the North signal, indicates to a navigator that he finds himself to the north of the channel), the other with 6 short flashes (one per second) and a long flash, known as the South signal, indicating to the navigator that he finds himself to the south of the channel.
gollark: * around a word means "italicize it" in Markdwon.
gollark: It's *.
gollark: This is not very accurate, though.
gollark: In a market, if people don't want kale that much, the kale company will probably not have much money and will not be able to buy all the available fertilizer.
gollark: You can just hand out what some random people think is absolutely *needed* first, then stick the rest of everything up for public use, but that won't work either! Someone has to decide on the "needed", so you get into a planned-economy sort of situation, and otherwise... what happens when, say, the community kale farm decides they want all the remaining fertilizer, even when people don't want *that* much kale?

See also

Notes


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