GERMAN LONG-ON-SEA BATTERY
One of the best-preserved batteries in Europe, comprising four casemates and a fire direction station.
The charming little village of Longues-sur-Mer, perched on high cliffs, was ideal for receiving cannons. And the Germans made no mistake, installing a formidable battery here. Built in 1943, it was never actually completed, as Allied bombing raids intensified in the run-up to D-Day. Situated between the British and American beaches, the battery comprises four casemates and one of Europe's best-preserved fire direction posts. It is the only battery on the Atlantic Wall to have retained its guns. Film buffs will certainly recognize the command post where a scene from The Longest Day was filmed: when a German officer stares in horror at the immense Allied fleet emerging from the fog. Today, on this wild and windy site, the walk is breathtaking. To the west, you can see the artificial port of Arromanches, and to the east, Omaha Beach.
The site is open to visitors free of charge all year round. To follow the interpretive trail, you can request the "circuits du patrimoine" brochure from the tourist office, or download it from the Normandie Tourisme website (eight panels spread over approximately one kilometer).
Finally, to extend your discovery, if you continue along the battery road, you'll come to a small pebble beach called Le Chaos, where the water is the color of a lagoon.
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