5616 x 3744 px | 47,5 x 31,7 cm | 18,7 x 12,5 inches | 300dpi
Data acquisizione:
2 luglio 2013
Altre informazioni:
The RNLI has been operating for more than 140 years in Shoreham. With the exception of a five-year period from 1924 to 1929, there has been an all-weather boat operational at Shoreham ever since. But the lifeboat station on Kingston Beach was built in 1933 to house an eight-tonne lifeboat and the Tyne-class lifeboat which arrived on station in 1990 weighed 28-tonnes causing the slipway at the boathouse to sink and collapse. Also facilities within the building meant there was no dedicated changing facility for the crew and much of the lower floor flooded at high tide. So in November, 2007, the RNLI sent out its own SOS by launching a £1million community appeal for a new lifeboat station at Shoreham. The aim of this was to help fund a brand new boathouse with modern facilities for the crew including a larger boat hall, crew training room, proper drying facilities for wet crew kit, changing facilities and a viewing platform for the public as well as being able to house a state-of-the-art Tamar-class lifeboat. In January, 2009, the Tyne-class lifeboat the Lady Hermione Colwyn was launched for the last time down the old lifeboat station's slipway before being moored afloat by the locks for the new build to begin. A few days later the bulldozers moved into knock down the old station but most of the lifeboat crew missed the historic occasion, as they were alerted to an emergency by the coastguard and launched the offshore lifeboat.