Slåtterøy Lighthouse | |
Location: | Bømlo Vestland Norway |
Coordinates: | 59.9082°N 5.0673°W |
Yearbuilt: | 1859 |
Automated: | 2003 |
Construction: | cast iron |
Shape: | cylindrical tower with double balcony and lantern |
Marking: | red tower with an horizontal white band, red lantern |
Intensity: | 5,180,000 cd |
Range: | 18.5nmi |
Characteristic: | Fl (2) W 30s. |
Racon: | T |
Managingagent: | Bømlo Kommune |
Slåtterøy Lighthouse (Norwegian: Slåtterøy fyr) is a coastal lighthouse located in the municipality of Bømlo in southwestern Vestland county (previously Hordaland county), Norway. It sits at the western entrance to the Selbjørnsfjorden, marking an island-filled area northeast of Bømlo and northwest of Stord.
The lighthouse was established in 1859 and fully automated in 2003. The 25m (82feet) round, cast iron tower is painted red with one white horizontal band. At the top, there is a light that emits a 5,180,000 candela, the highest intensity among all lighthouses in Norway. The light sits at an elevation of above sea level and it emits a white light in the pattern of 2 flashes every 30 seconds.[1] [2]
The lighthouse was listed as a protected site in 2000 and in 2003 it was fully automated. The ownership of the site was then transferred to the municipal government. Overnight accommodations are available, as are guided tours. The site is only accessible by boat from the nearby island of Gisøy.[3] [4]
. 2014. Norske Fyrliste 2014. PDF. Kystverket. Norwegian Coastal Administration. Norwegian. 9788245015959. 2015-02-20. 2018-06-12. https://web.archive.org/web/20180612143229/http://153.44.6.20/fyrlister/Fyrliste_HeleLandet.pdf. dead.