Skip to content

Sharpy Shines From Lake Garda Lighthouse

Share this Post:

RIVA, Italy – The Spiaggia degli Olivi lighthouse, a historic monument on Lake Garda, was turned off about 40 years ago. Restoration work has turned on the light again – but instead of the complicated original 24-volt mechanism, there is a new Clay Paky Sharpy inside the lantern room, which is not only able to reproduce the brightness of the old lighthouse, but also its perfect movement.

More details from Clay Paky (http://www.claypaky.it):

RIVA, Italy – The Spiaggia degli Olivi lighthouse, a historic monument on Lake Garda and the symbol of the town of Riva, was turned off about 40 years ago. The diving board tower, on top of which the historic lake lighthouse was installed, is found at the end of the pier. Thanks to restoration work in the area, commissioned by Lido di Riva, the lighthouse started sweeping the Trento waters of the lake once again with its beam in October 2012. The surprise is that, instead of the complicated original 24-volt mechanism, there is a new Clay Paky Sharpy inside the lantern room, which is not only able to reproduce the brightness of the old lighthouse, but also its perfect movement.

Giacomo Galassi of Iiriti Noleggi explained, “Owing to the originality of the installation, Clay Paky was extremely helpful and let us try the light out for over a month so that we could test it in actual use. We also programmed it, after it was installed by Albano Miori’s AGS. In the end the customer was very satisfied with the new light, owing to its luminous efficiency, low energy consumption and ease of maintenance thanks to the lamp (only 189 W).”

The Sharpy was programmed to reproduce the same timing and exact coverage of the original lighthouse, and obviously uses a full white beam. Incredibly, however, it was necessary to dim the light to lower the power as the full beam disturbed people more than 25 kilometers away. A special resolution was passed by the local government to limit the light cone so that it only covers the lake between Punta Lido and the former Grotta Azzurra, so as not to dazzle residential buildings and vehicles on their way to Riva on the Lake Garda trunk road.