Kish Bank

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "about". Template:Use dmy dates Template:Short descriptionScript error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".[[Category:Pages using infobox lighthouse with custom country number|Template:Str leftKish Bank]]Script error: No such module "lighthouse tracking".Expression error: Unexpected < operator. The Kish Bank (Irish: Banc na Cise)[2] is a shallow sand bank approximately Script error: No such module "convert". off the coast of Dublin, in Ireland. It is marked by the Kish Lighthouse,[3] a landmark visible to sailors and ferry passengers passing through Dublin Bay and Dún Laoghaire harbour.

Many ships were wrecked on these shallows. The Vesper was lost in January 1876; the Norwegian MV Bolivar ran aground on the Kish Bank during a snow storm on 4 March 1947; both wrecks are frequently dived.[4] A mailboat operated by the City of Dublin Steam Packet Company between Kingstown (now Dún Laoghaire) and Holyhead, Script error: No such module "WPSHIPS utilities"., was torpedoed and sunk by a German submarine on 10 October 1918. She went down Script error: No such module "convert". east of the Kish light with over 500 lives lost, the greatest single loss of life in the Irish Sea. Fifty-five wrecks are listed for the Kish Bank area.[5]

Lighthouse

File:Kish Lighthouse in June 1987, off the Dublin coast.jpg
The lighthouse in 1987

Before the present Kish lighthouse was installed in 1965, the sandbank had been marked by a lightvessel since 1811. An attempt to build a lighthouse in 1842 was abandoned following the destruction caused by severe weather. The first Irish electric light vessel, Gannet, was installed in 1954.

The Commissioners of Irish Lights decided in 1960 to erect a reinforced concrete lighthouse with a helicopter landing pad on top, designed by Christiani & Nielsen.[1] The sand bank was bored in 1961 and a seismic survey revealed about Script error: No such module "convert". of sand at the site. Construction began in 1963 in the Coal Harbour of Dún Laoghaire, but the first section of the lighthouse cracked while it was being built and had to be discarded. The second telescopic lighthouse was completed and towed out to the sandbank on 29 June 1965. The tower was raised on 27 July 1965 to its full height of Script error: No such module "convert"., with twelve floors inside, and with a Script error: No such module "convert".-wide helicopter platform on top. It had a projected lifetime of 75 years.

The new lighthouse took over from the previous light vessel on 9 November 1965. The lighthouse operates at a candlepower of between two and three million, depending on visibility conditions, and the beam is visible for Script error: No such module "convert".. The lighthouse was automated on 7 April 1992, and the keepers came ashore.[3]

In July 2018, Cunningham Civil & Marine undertook an overhaul of the site, including repainting and the upgrading of helicopter netting.[6]

Proposed windfarm

In late 1999, the Department of Marine and Natural Resources awarded licenses to allow studies to be carried out on the Kish and Bray Banks in relation to the construction of a proposed offshore wind farm. Press reports at the time suggested that 100 or more wind turbines could be erected.[7] As of March 2001, it was reported that the ESB Group had been afforded a foreshore licence to undertake related surveys.[8]

By late 2020, the proposed development (titled the "Dublin Array" project) was associated with the Irish company Saorgus Energy and German energy company RWE.[9] In December 2022, the Department of the Environment granted 'Maritime Area Consent' (MAC) to RWE and Saorgus Energy, to progress the Dublin Array wind farm, to be "located on the Kish Bank and Bray Bank, roughly 10km off the coast of south Co Dublin and Co Wicklow". If built as planned it would "comprise between 45 and 61 wind turbines with capacity to generate between 600 and 900 megawatts of renewable energy".[10] A planning application was submitted to An Bord Pleanála in February 2025.[11]

Burials at sea

At the time when the Department of the Marine permitted burial at sea (of people who had died on land), they normally required the burial to occur at the Kish Bank where the tides are strong, and where the sands are always moving.

See also

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References

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  1. a b Template:Cite rowlett
  2. Kish Bank. Irish Placenames Database. Retrieved: 2010-10-22.
  3. a b Kish Lighthouse. Commissioners of Irish Lights. Retrieved: 2010-10-22.
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External links

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