Split Point Lighthouse
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (May 2008) |
Split Point Lighthouse | |
---|---|
Location: | Australia |
Year first lit: | 1891 |
Automated: | 1919 |
Construction: | Concrete, rendered with cement |
Height: | 34 metres |
Elevation: | 66 metres |
Intensity: | 116,000 CD(White) 23,000 CD(Red) |
Range: | 37 km(White) 29.5 Km (Red) |
Characteristic: | Gp.Fl.(4) every 20 seconds |
Split Point Lighthouse is a lighthouse located in Aireys Inlet—a small town on the Great Ocean Road, Victoria, Australia.
Contents |
[edit] History
Originally called Eagles Nest Point, the lighthouse was originally built in 1891. It was converted to automatic operation in 1919.
The original British-made lens is still in use. However, the factory in Birmingham, where the lens was built, was bombed during war-time and the essential formulas for making the unique lens crystal were lost, should a replacement ever be needed.
A Japanese firm, consulted by the Australian Maritime Safety Authority, estimated the cost of replacing the lens at more than AUS$1 million.
Under standard Australian lighthouse convention, red filters would usually be placed to the extreme left and right of the beam (indicating "danger zones" for a passing ship, in-line with the jagged coastline). For reasons unknown, the Split Point Lighthouse operated for many years under the opposite system; although this has now been corrected.
The original lighthouse keeper's quarters, a detached house adjacent to the site, is now a privately owned residence.
[edit] Today
Since summer 2005, the Split Point Lighthouse has been offering regular 30 minute guided tours, during which visitors have the chance to climb the original staircase and experience the view from the balcony just below the latern room. Tours had been available for much of the 1990s, but on only a few days per year.
The top of the lighthouse is also now used as a mobile phone base station, making it dangerous to enter the lantern room (or any area above) whilst it is in operation, due to possible exposure to RF radiation.
[edit] Popular culture
The popular children's television series Round the Twist used the area around the Split Point Lighthouse for many external scenes.
[edit] Gallery
[edit] References
|