Perched in the shipping channel of Long Island Sound, Overnight at the Light invites adventurous travelers to spend a night inside Greens Ledge Lighthouse, a working seven‑floor cast‑iron tower that sits off the Norwalk and Rowayton coastline in Connecticut. Boarding begins at Community Beach Dock (59 Rowayton Avenue, Rowayton CT) for a short boat ride that drops you onto a compact island with panoramic 360-degree views of the water, the Connecticut and New York shorelines, and the glowing Manhattan skyline.
This is not glamping; it is a living piece of maritime history with modern comforts. An introductory tour led by the Greens Ledge Light Preservation Society orients guests to the lighthouse’s systems, restoration work, and safety procedures before you settle in. The lighthouse is off-grid but equipped with renewable solar and wind power, and guests enjoy a fully equipped kitchen, two bathrooms, and an outdoor hot‑water shower. With room for up to six people, the lighthouse offers a rare private night beneath an active rotating beacon that perches nearly 100 feet above Long Island Sound.
Key features include the cast-iron tower itself, its reinforced granite foundation—rebuilt in 1932, with 30,000 tons of granite from Radio City Music Hall’s excavation—and the island’s raw coastal exposure. Natural elements here are marine and geological: the Sound’s tidal rhythms, salt-sprayed ironwork, and seabird colonies that ride offshore thermals. The structure’s history—built in 1902, strengthened after the Hurricane of 1938, serving as a World War II observation post, and now listed on the National Register of Historic Places—adds a tangible layer to the overnight experience.
The Greens Ledge program is intentionally limited: only a handful of nights are offered each year to support the lighthouse’s restoration and the preservation society’s 'The Next 100 Years' campaign. That scarcity is part of the appeal; guests become temporary stewards of a working aid to navigation while learning firsthand about maritime safety, coastal resilience, and community heritage.
Practical realities matter: landing depends on weather and tides, access requires negotiating docks, ramps, stairs, and ladders, and tours are not handicap accessible. Guests should be comfortable with boat travel and narrow stairways. Still, for those who go, the payoff is elemental—starlit crossings, a blazing city horizon, the rhythm of the beacon, and the satisfaction of helping preserve an iconic piece of New England’s shoreline.
Evenings here unfold differently: sunset gilds the ironwork, the rotating lantern casts slow, carved shadows, and gulls wheel against the skyline while seals sometimes surface near the breakwater. Check-in is required at least 15 minutes before departure; the vessel and landing are subject to the captain’s discretion. Donation add-ons support ongoing work, and every booking directly contributes to preserving the lighthouse for future visitors and history.