Geitungen Lighthouse Explained

Geitungen Lighthouse
Geitungen Fyrstasjon
Location:Karmøy
Rogaland
Norway
Coordinates:59.1314°N 5.2428°W
Yearbuilt:1924
Automated:1994
Construction:masonry tower
Shape:octagonal tower
Marking:white tower, red lantern roof
Range:17nmi
Characteristic:Oc WRG 6s.
Racon:G
Country:Norway
Countrynumber:126500
Managingagent:Haugesund Turistforening

Geitungen Lighthouse (Norwegian: Geitungen fyr) is a coastal lighthouse in the municipality of Karmøy in Rogaland county, Norway. The lighthouse is located on a small island about off the southern tip of the main island of Karmøy. The entrance to the harbor of the town of Skudeneshavn lies about northeast of the lighthouse. The island is accessible only by boat. The lighthouse was established in 1924 and it was automated in 1994. It was listed as a protected site in 1998.[1] [2]

Technical specifications

The 11m (36feet) tall lighthouse emits a white, red or green light, depending on direction, occulting once every six seconds. The light sits at an elevation of above sea level on top of an octagonal prism tower. The concrete masonry tower is attached to a U-shaped one-story lighthouse keeper's house. The lighthouse is painted white and the roof is red. The lighthouse also emits a racon signal, using the morse code letter "G". The racon signal can be received inside a 1.13nmi radius of the lighthouse.[3] [4]

History

The lighthouse was established in 1924 as a replacement for Skudenes Lighthouse, which had operated from 1799 to 1924.[5]

Geitungen Lighthouse was designed by Jørgen H. Meinich, who later also designed Makkaur Lighthouse. The argument for a new location, was the need for a foghorn. The diaphone at Geitungen Lighthouse was the first diaphone installed in Norway.[6] Geitungen was automated and depopulated in 1994,[2] and was listed as a protected site in 1998.[1] The protected site includes the lighthouse and three technical buildings.[7]

Tourist station

The living house associated with Geitungen Lighthouse is operated as a tourist station by the Norwegian Trekking Association, through its Haugesund chapter (Norwegian: Haugesund Turistforening). It has 35 beds available for visitors. The site is only accessible by boat.[8]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Encyclopedia: Geitungen fyr . Store norske leksikon. Godal . Anne Marit . Anne Marit Godal . Norsk nettleksikon . Norwegian. 5 February 2012.
  2. Web site: Geitungen fyrstasjon . Norsk Fyrhistorisk Forening . Norwegian . 5 February 2012.
  3. 19 July 2011. 2015-12-01.
  4. Book: 2014. Norske Fyrliste 2014. PDF. Kystverket. Norwegian Coastal Administration. Norwegian. 9788245015959. 2015-12-02. https://web.archive.org/web/20180612143229/http://153.44.6.20/fyrlister/Fyrliste_HeleLandet.pdf. 2018-06-12. dead.
  5. Web site: Skudenes fyrstasjon . Riksantikvaren . Norwegian . 6 December 2015 . https://archive.today/20130712233400/http://www.kulturminnesok.no/Lokaliteter/Rogaland/Karmoey/SKUDENES-FYRSTASJON . 12 July 2013 . dead .
  6. Web site: Geitungen fyr . Bjørn Arild . Ersland . Coast Alive . Norwegian . 6 December 2015 .
  7. Web site: Geitungen fyrstasjon . Riksantikvaren . Norwegian . 6 December 2015 . https://archive.today/20130712233424/http://www.kulturminnesok.no/Lokaliteter/Rogaland/Karmoey/GEITUNGEN-FYRSTASJON . 12 July 2013 . dead .
  8. Book: DNTs årbok 2012. Dine hytter  - Del 2. Sør for Jotunheimen . Hallgrim . Rogn . Geitungen Fyr . 175 . Den Norske Turistforening . Norwegian . 978-82-8279-004-8 . 2012 .