Blankenese High Lighthouse Explained

Blankenese High Lighthouse
Blankenese Oberfeuer
Location:Blankenese, Hamburg
Coordinates:53.556°N 9.8163°W
Yearbuilt:1984
Yeardeactivated:2020
Construction:reinforced concrete
Shape:cylindrical tower with inverted conical at the summit
Marking:white tower with two horizontal red bands, red summit
Height:40m (130feet), height of light 39m (128feet)
Focalheight:84m (276feet)
Lens:electric
Intensity:16 Mcd
Range:8410m (27,590feet)
Characteristic:white light 2s on, 2s off, synchronized with the front light
Managingagent:WSA Hamburg[1]

Blankenese High Lighthouse (also known as Blankenese Upper Lighthouse) was a lighthouse on the river Elbe in the Hamburg district of Blankenese, from 1984 to 2020.

Description

Blankenese High Lighthouse and Blankenese Low Lighthouse form a range of lights for ships sailing upriver on the Elbe. With a range of 8.4 kilometers, they have the longest range on the Unterelbe.[2]

The Blankenese High Lighthouse was 40-meters tall, white-and-red-striped concrete tower with a red steel lantern house was constructed in 1983.[3] It is located in Baurs Park on the Kanonenberg, approximately 1,340 meters from the low light. Inside it has a round staircase leading to the top. Because of its height, the tower has an obstacle lighting for air transport.

The eleven-ton lantern house was assembled using a mobile crane. The range of lights went operational on 29 November 1984.

The lighthouse was remotely controlled by the Seemanshöft Pilot Centre.

Replacement

Due to adjustments to the Elbe fairway, both the High and the Low Lighthouses were replaced to a similar 62.25 m high at Mühlenberg and demolished.[4] [5] [6]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. 31 January 2016.
  2. Web site: Lighthouse Blankenese Upper . Skyscraperpage.com . 29 June 2015.
  3. Web site: Diagrams . Skyscraperpage.com . 29 June 2015.
  4. Web site: Blankenese erhält Deutschlands vierthöchsten Leuchtturm. Meyer-Odewald. Jens. 2018-10-23. www.abendblatt.de. de-DE. 2019-05-13.
  5. Web site: Blankeneser Leuchttürme werden abgerissen. Braun. Ralf Nehmzow und Carina. 2012-07-23. www.abendblatt.de. de-DE. 2019-05-13.
  6. Web site: New lighthouses for Blankenese. www.hamburg-port-authority.de. en. 2019-05-13.