Lighthouse Projects


These lighthouse projects are a great source of satisfaction to the Hardin Optical employees who were fortunate enough to work on them. Being from the Oregon Coast where these lighthouses are a common sight, it gives them a sense of accomplishment and community pride to have the chance to be a part of these two lighthouses' history.

Cape Blanco Lighthouse

In 1992 the Coast Guard approached Hardin Optical as part of their nationwide search for an optics company to restore the second order Fresnel lens at the Cape Blanco Lighthouse. Vandals (two local teens with a crowbar) had broken into the lighthouse tower and smashed one of the eight bulls-eye lenses and several of the prisms. These types of lenses had last been manufactured in France, nearly 100 years ago.

Hardin Optical's design engineers and optical technicians had worked on some interesting projects before, but nothing quite like this. The project was a unique blend of aesthetics and function. The new lenses must work with the originals still in place to project a signal, and the new lenses also need to visually match the originals so that the visiting public would notice little or no difference between them.

It took a years worth of effort and some complex reverse engineering to recreate the prisms. Hardin Optical worked through all sorts of challenges from finding a suitable contemporary glass to designing custom machinery and fixtures to handle such large prisms. In 1994 the damaged bulls-eye lens and prisms were successfully restored.

Then in 2002 Hardin Optical was called upon again. The Cape Blanco Lighthouse was undergoing a full restoration. Hardin Optical technicians removed and refurbished the lenses, then reinstalled them in the tower when the remainder of the restoration was complete.

The Cape Blanco Lighthouse claims the distinction of being Oregon's oldest, highest above the sea, and most westerly lighthouse. It was originally built in 1870 and isone of many lighthouses that dot the western coast from Mexico to Canada to aide mariners in navigation. Cape Blanco is near the town of Port Orford, south of Bandon, where Hardin Optical's operations are located.

Haceta Head Lighthouse

In 1994, during routine maintenance of the Haceta Head Lighthouse, one bulls-eye lens and several prisms of the first order Fresnel lens were dislodged and broken. Hardin Optical was selected to perform this restoration work as well. With the recent experience of the Cape Blanco work under their belts, the Hardin Optical engineers and technicians met this challenge head on. They worked to manufacture the replacement prisms and restored this historic lighthouse lens to its original condition.

On March 30, 1894 the lamp at the Haceta Head Lighthouse was lit. Construction began on the lighthouse in 1892 and it was finished in August of 1893. Haceta Head is named for Don Bruno de Haceta of the Spanish Royal Navy who surveyed the area in 1775. It is near Florence, north of Bandon, where Hardin Optical's operations are located.