La Marina Lighthouse Explained

Location:Miraflores, Lima, Peru
Coordinates:-12.1237°N -77.0401°W
Yearbuilt:1900
Yearlit:1972 (relocated)
Foundation:Concrete
Construction:Metal tower
Shape:Cylindrical tower with gallery and lantern
Marking:Blue navy painted with two white horizontal bands, blue lantern
Country:Peru
Countrynumber:PE-22166

La Marina Lighthouse (Spanish; Castilian: Faro de la Marina) is an active lighthouse set in parkland on high cliffs above the Pacific Ocean, in the Miraflores district of Lima, the capital of Peru. It is one of the most famous and visited lighthouses in the country.[1]

History

The lighthouse was originally constructed in 1900 at Punta Coles, a headland near Ilo, but in 1973 it was dismantled and reconstructed in Miraflores.[1] It is situated in the appropriately named Parque del Faro, one of a number of popular parks above the cliffs in the city, which commemorates a century of Peruvian navigation.[2]

It consists of a 22m (72feet) high iron tower, with a gallery and lantern, painted a very dark blue, with two white bands.[1]

With a focal height of above the sea, its light can be seen for 18nmi, and consists of a pattern of three flashes of white light, over a period of fifteen seconds.[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. 31 May 2015.
  2. Book: DK Eyewitness Travel Guide: Peru: Peru. 1 September 2010. Dorling Kindersley Limited. 978-1-4053-6756-1. 79–.