Harmaja: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 60°06′18″N 24°58′41″E / 60.105°N 24.978°E / 60.105; 24.978
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{{about|the island|the band|Harmaja (band)|the poet|Saima Harmaja}}
[[Image:Gråhara-Harmaja.jpg|thumb|Harmaja lighthouse]]
[[Image:Gråhara-Harmaja.jpg|thumb|Harmaja lighthouse]]
'''Harmaja''' ({{lang-sv|Gråhara}}) is an island and a [[lighthouse]] outside [[Helsinki]], south of the [[Suomenlinna]] sea forteress. The island has been functioning as a landmark since the 16th century. A landmark structure was built on the island in the 18th century and a light house in 1883. The first lighthouse was only 7.3 m high and it soon proved to be too low. In 1900 the height was doubled by creating a rectangular brick building on a granite base. A large [[misthorn]] alerted ships in fog and in bad visibility. Harmaja received the world's first directed and undirected radiobeacon in 1936. The lighthouse is fully automated today.
'''Harmaja''' ({{lang-sv|Gråhara}}) is an island and a [[lighthouse]] outside [[Helsinki]], south of the [[Suomenlinna]] sea forteress. The island has been functioning as a landmark since the 16th century. A landmark structure was built on the island in the 18th century and a light house in 1883. The first lighthouse was only 7.3 m high and it soon proved to be too low. In 1900 the height was doubled by creating a rectangular brick building on a granite base. A large [[misthorn]] alerted ships in fog and in bad visibility. Harmaja received the world's first directed and undirected radiobeacon in 1936. The lighthouse is fully automated today.

Revision as of 22:07, 26 February 2009

Harmaja lighthouse

Harmaja (Swedish: Gråhara) is an island and a lighthouse outside Helsinki, south of the Suomenlinna sea forteress. The island has been functioning as a landmark since the 16th century. A landmark structure was built on the island in the 18th century and a light house in 1883. The first lighthouse was only 7.3 m high and it soon proved to be too low. In 1900 the height was doubled by creating a rectangular brick building on a granite base. A large misthorn alerted ships in fog and in bad visibility. Harmaja received the world's first directed and undirected radiobeacon in 1936. The lighthouse is fully automated today.

There is also a pilot station on the island.

Source

60°06′18″N 24°58′41″E / 60.105°N 24.978°E / 60.105; 24.978