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Slettnes Lighthouse

Slettnes Lighthouse
Slettnes fyr
Nordkapp
Slettnes Nordkinnhalvøya 2012-07-11-10-20-037.jpg
View of the lighthouse
Slettnes Lighthouse is located in Finnmark
Slettnes Lighthouse
Finnmark
Location Gamvik Municipality
Finnmark
Norway
Coordinates 71°05′22.6″N 28°13′06.2″E / 71.089611°N 28.218389°E / 71.089611; 28.218389Coordinates: 71°05′22.6″N 28°13′06.2″E / 71.089611°N 28.218389°E / 71.089611; 28.218389
Year first constructed 1905
Year first lit 15 Sept 1905
Automated 2005
Foundation concrete basement
Construction cast iron tower
Tower shape cylindrical tower with balcony and lantern
Markings / pattern red tower with 2 white bands
Height 39 metres (128 ft)
Focal height 44 metres (144 ft)
Intensity 1,706,000 candela
Range 17.6 nmi (32.6 km; 20.3 mi)
Characteristic Fl W 20s.
Racon T
Admiralty number L4126
NGA number 14444
ARLHS number NOR-215
Norway number 956500

Slettnes Lighthouse (Norwegian: Slettnes fyr) is the northernmost lighthouse on the European mainland. It is located in Gamvik Municipality in Finnmark county, Norway. It sits along the Barents Sea approximately 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) north of the village of Gamvik on the northern coast of the Nordkinn Peninsula. The 39-metre (128 ft) lighthouse is the only cast iron lighthouse in Finnmark county.

This is the easternmost of the three Nordkapp area lighthouses, and it is often considered the North Cape Light, marking the "top" of Europe. Fruholmen Lighthouse is located about 500 metres (0.31 mi) farther north, but it is on the island of Ingøya, but Slettnes Lighthouse is the northernmost lighthouse on the mainland of Scandinavia.

This lighthouse was built from 1903 to 1905. The round cast iron tower is 39 metres (128 ft) tall and it is painted red with two white horizontal bands. The light on top emits one long (2.5 sec) white flash every 20 seconds. The light burns from 12 August until 24 April each year. It doesn't burn during the summer due to the midnight sun. In 1922 the lighthouse got a foghorn with a siren, which gave a signal every thirty seconds, helping in fog and bad visibility. The foghorn could be heard in form of a one to two tone signal with a range of 6 nautical miles (11 km; 6.9 mi). The fog horn was in use until 1985.

The lighthouse was heavily damaged during World War II by German troops, but it was painstakingly restored after the war. The restored station was designed by architects Blakstad and Munthe-Kaas and it was completed in 1948. The station is owned by the Kystverket and managed by Gamvik Municipality as a tourist center, and overnight accommodations are available in the station buildings. In 1998, the lighthouse was listed as a heritage site. The lighthouse was automated in 2005.


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