Cape Point (New) Light

South Africa

The original lighthouse was built too high on the cliffs, so its light could not be seen through low clouds or fog. Construction of the new tower took 5 years under very difficult conditions. Located atop a steep pinnacle above Cape Point. It is difficult to reach the lighthouse. Site and tower closed.

The new lighthouse is at a lower elevation (87 meters; 285.5 feet above sea level), for two reasons: the old lighthouse, located at 34°21′12″S 18°29′25.2″E (262 meters; 859.6 feet above sea level), could be seen 'too early' by ships rounding the point towards the east, causing them to approach too closely. Secondly, foggy conditions often prevail at the higher levels, making the older lighthouse invisible to shipping. On 18 April 1911, the Portuguese liner Lusitania was wrecked just south of Cape Point at 34°23′22″S 18°29′23″E on Bellows Rock for precisely this reason, prompting the relocation of the lighthouse.

The new lighthouse, located at 34°21′26″S 18°29′49″E, cannot be seen from the West until ships are at a safe distance to the South. The light of the new Cape Point lighthouse is the most powerful on the South African coast, with a range of 63 kilometres (39 mi; 34 nmi) and an intensity of 10 megacandelas in each flash.

Manufacture Date 1914
Lighthouse Construction 1919
Country South Africa
Lens Order 1st order
Lens Type Revolving
Status publish
Light Character [FL(2+1)30S32M&FR15M]
Lighthouse Markings 9 m (30 ft) square cylindrical stone tower with lantern and gallery. Tower is unpainted stone; lantern painted white with a red dome.
Lighthouse Parts none
Preserver South African National Parks (Table Mountain National Park)
Coastal Erosion Vulnerability
Open Status (Site) Closed
Open Status (Tower) Closed
Coordinates -34.3569440021,18.4969013899
Other Source: South African lighthouses . Chance Brothers and the rest. Copyright © Toby Chance 2008  Name: Cape Point, Cape of Good Hope, Western Cape Date when a Chance apparatus was installed: 1919 The original light was first lit in 1860 using a first-order French lens which only produced 2,000 candlepower. Situated too high and often shrouded in fog, it was dismantled and a new light equipped with a Chance Brothers first-order lens was installed lower down the cliff in 1919 – the most powerful lens in South Africa to this day. A 400-Watt metal halide lamp is presently in use producing an intensity of approximately 10 million candela. See also Cape Point (Old) Light https://new.opengreenmap.org/browse/sites/62b0c2fe640b470100158c95?map=6241b7a8d63fa5010056589b
Data Source Chance Lighthouses (1856-1917) (61 years)

Lighthouse Location

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