Skagen Lighthouse

Skagen Lighthouse

Skagen Lighthouse (Danish: Skagen Fyr), also known as Skagen's Grey Lighthouse (Det Grå Fyr), is a lighthouse 4 km (2.5 mi) northeast of Skagen in the far north of Jutland, Denmark. Designed by architect Niels Sigfred Nebelong, it was brought into operation on 1 November 1858.[1]

Description

Skagen's first lighthouse, the White Lighthouse (Det Hvide Fyr), designed by Philip de Lange and completed in 1747, was the first lighthouse in Denmark to be built in brick.[2] The Skagen Lighthouse which replaced it consists of an unpainted round brick tower with a lantern and gallery, reaching a height of 151 ft (46 m). The two-storey keeper's house to which it is attached is painted bright yellow. When it was built is was more or less at the centre of the Skagen Odde peninsula, but as a result of coastal erosion, it is now very near the Kattegat coast to the southeast.[3]

The lighthouse has a two-ton rotating lens resting on mercury. Originally there was a five-wicked paraffin lamp which was successively replaced with a 1,000 Watt then a 1,500 Watt electric lamp. Today there is a 400 Watt sodium lamp which every four seconds can be seen up to 37 km (20 mi) away.[4]

Until 1952 Skagen Lighthouse was the country's tallest.[2] Dueodde Lighthouse on Bornholm is now just one meter higher.[4]

Open to visitors

The lighthouse is open to visitors every day from 10 am to 4 pm.[4]

See also

References

  1. "Skagen Fyr", Den Store Danske. (Danish) Retrieved 8 November 2013.
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Det Hvide Fyr i Skagen", Den Store Danske. (Danish) Retrieved 8 November 2013.
  3. "Lighthouses of Denmark: Northeast Jylland", The Lighthouse Directory. Retrieved 8 November 2013.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Dennis Kragholm Lysgaard, "Kom op i ‘Det Grå Fyr’ og se Skagen fra oven", Skagen.dk, 29 May 2013. (Danish) Retrieved 9 November 2013.

Literature

Coordinates: 57°44′07″N 10°37′49″E / 57.73528°N 10.63028°E

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