De Ven

Lighthouse
52°44′31.4″N 5°16′56.1″E / 52.742056°N 5.282250°E / 52.742056; 5.282250TowerConstructed1700Constructionbrick towerHeight15 metres (49 ft)Shapesquare tower with balcony and lanternMarkingswhite tower, red lanternHeritageRijksmonument Edit this on WikidataLightFirst lit14 November 1839 Edit this on WikidataDeactivatedbriefly in 2009Focal height18 metres (59 ft)Intensity4,200 cdRange11 nautical miles (20 km)CharacteristicL Fl W10s.Netherlands no.NL-1618[1][2]

De Ven is a lighthouse in Oosterdijk, a village in the municipality of Enkhuizen, Netherlands. Built in 1699–1700, it is one of the oldest lighthouses in the Netherlands.

History

De Ven was one of the three lighthouses indicating the route from the Waddenzee to Amsterdam; the other two were at Marken and Durgerdam. De Ven is the only one remaining of the three original lighthouses.

In 1819 the lighthouse burned down, with only the outer walls still standing. An emergency solution functioned for twenty years. In 1834, the light was equipped with a Fresnel lens. For years, a second tower next to the lighthouse passed on information to passing ships about wind and weather. Since 1966 the lighthouse is a Rijksmonument.

The light was extinguished on 16 April 2009 since the light characteristic no longer properly marked the shipping route to Lemmer. After protests the light was reinstated with a different characteristic, on 21 October 2009. The lighthouse is not open to the public.

See also

Dutch Rijksmonument 15066
  • flagNetherlands portal

References

  1. ^ Rowlett, Russ. "Lighthouses of Northern Netherlands". The Lighthouse Directory. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
  2. ^ Nederlandse Vuurtorens
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