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  • Seeing the light

     

    The final lick of paint was added today, as part of an extensive makeover of one of Cornwall’s most prominent landmarks.

     

    Painters from Ian Williams have spent a number of weeks working on Trevose Head Lighthouse, Padstow.

     

    The navigation aid was first erected in December 1847 and stands at 27 metres tall. It highlights the hazard to sailors navigating the Devon and Cornish coastline.

     

    Employees at Ian Williams, which has a regional office in Plymouth, have undergone specialist training to complete the work. The contract follows the completion of similar large-scale jobs elsewhere in the country, including the Clifton Suspension Bridge.

     

    The work at Trevose Head is part of an ongoing contract with Trinity House, which owns 69 lighthouses across the UK. Jobs already completed in the area to improve the safety of mariners include the decoration of Pendeen Lighthouse, near St Just.

     

    Specialist paint and equipment has been used to protect the building and workers from the elements. In total five painters worked on the project and used 695 litres of paint to finish the job.

     

    Ian Flatt, general manager at Ian Williams, said: “We are delighted to have finished this latest challenge. We have a strong approach to training which means that our staff have the required skills to handle a job of this size, although the helicopter required to reach some of the sites will be a new experience to many.

     

    “As an organisation we enjoy new challenges and we are confident of exceeding our clients’ expectations. Our core experience of painting has certainly been tested but being one of the UK’s largest painters means nothing fazes the team now, not even wind, water and waves!"