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Lighthouse of Cabo Carvoeiro

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Lighthouse of Cabo Carvoeiro
Farol de Cabo Carvoeiro
Cabo Carvoeiro in 2015
Map
LocationPeniche, Peniche
Coordinates39°21′38″N 9°24′28″W / 39.36067°N 9.40781°W / 39.36067; -9.40781
Tower
Constructed1893 (1893)
Construction1-story stone lighthouse
Height27 feet (8.2 m)
Shapeprismatic tower
Markingswhite tower with cornerstones
Power sourcemains electricity Edit this on Wikidata
OperatorDirecção de Faróis (Directorate for Lighthouses)
HeritageUnclassified
Light
Focal height57 feet (17 m)
Lens3rd order Fresnel lens
Light sourcemains power
Range13 nautical miles (24 km; 15 mi)
CharacteristicFl.R period 6s, fl. 2s, ec. 4s
Portugal no.PT-143

The Lighthouse of Cabo Carvoeiro (Portuguese: Farol de Cabo Carvoeiro) is an active lighthouse in the civil parish of Peniche, municipality of the same name, in the Portuguese district of Leiria.

History

On 1 February 1758, the lighthouse was ordered constructed by regal charter.[1] Cabo Carvoeiro is a prominent cape along the southern Portuguese coast, with a coastal beacon operating for four centuries from the promontory, first from the chapel of Nossa Senhora de Vitória (before it was demolished).[1]

The first purpose-built structure was a 21 metres (69 ft) tall lighthouse that started to operate in 1790, but identified as inadequate by an 1881 commission.[1] In 1865, the lighthouse was described in this form:

...it is found at an elevation of 55.52 metres. The light is white and fixed, produced by sixteen Argand with parabolic reflectors. The range exceeds about 9 miles. The lantern where this mechanism was installed has a 8.24 metre height and eight faces with a width of 1.67 metre...The building where the lantern is a rectangular tower, is constructed of masonry with cornerstones. Alongside the tower are lodgings for lighthouse keepers, offices and pantries e, linking theses buildings is a church in ruins (called the Church of Nossa Senhora da Vitória, over which there use to be a light, to guide navigators before the lighthouse existed). The power source was olive oil. [1]

But, by 1886, it was completely remodelled, under the direction and project of Polycarpo Lima. This included the installation of a petrol lamp to illuminate the beacon.[1]

In 1923 the fixture was substituted for a giant fourth-order optical lens, and operated by clockwork mechanical system, resulting in a system of four red flashes, separated in 10 seconds intervals.[1]

The light was substituted in 1947 by gas lamp.[1] Between 1947 and 1949, the Comissão Administrativa das Novas Instalações para a Marinha (Navy New Installations Administrative Commission), later the Direcção de Faróis (Directorate for Lighthouses) constructed the lighthouse keepers residences.[1]

By 1952, the beacon began to operate by electricity.[1]

The lighthouse required large modifications by 1981, in order to receive a new lens, as indicated by reports of the Comissão de Faróis e Balizas (Lighthouse and Beacons Commission).[1] The General Plan projected had a white third-order light that could illuminate a 315º range and support a 17 miles (27 km) range.[1] A red beacon was substituted when the lighthouse along Cabo Mondego was not changed, maintaining a fixed white lamp, then groups of two clarions.[1] By 1988, the lighthouse was automated, with the optics removed and its place replaced by a PRB46 rotating panel, that emitted three, red flashes, with 15 second interval and 15 nautical miles (28 km) range.[1] Its contemporary role is much less important, with the red beacon being used to guide ships on their approach to the nearby fishing port of Peniche.[1]

Architecture

Building constructed to assist maritime navigation that included a permanent residence for the lighthouse keeper, the lighthouse is situated 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) from the Peniche waterfront over a promontory.

Coastal lighthouse with a 27 metres (89 ft) high prismatic tower, it was constructed with cornerstones and parapets painted in white, alongside a rectangular annex building. The robust square cylindrical stone tower with lantern and fog horn (one 10 second blast every 35 seconds) and gallery rises from the base of a U-shaped one-story keeper's complex. The buildings are painted white with unpainted stone trim while the lantern painted red.

The illumination system comprises a rotating optical lens over a pedestal, using a white light with 15 nautical miles (28 km) range at 57 metres (187 ft) overall height.

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Costa, Patrícia; Matias, Cecília (2008), SIPA (ed.), FFarol do Cabo Carvoeiro (IPA.00016894/PT031014040027) (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: SIPA – Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico, retrieved 27 July 2016

Sources

  • Relatório da Actividade do Ministério no Triénio de 1947 a 1949 (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: Ministério das Obras Públicas, 1950
  • Callixto, Carlos (1 February 1980), "A Igreja, o Forte e o Farol do Cabo Carvoeiro", Revista da Marinha (in Portuguese)
  • Vilhena, João Francisco; Louro, Maria Regina (1995), Faróis de Portugal (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)