offshore wind photography

Island Diligence & Norside Cygnus: Offshore Workhorses at Sunset and Storm

Service operation vessel Island Diligence under a rainbow at a Scottish offshore wind farm. Industrial and maritime photography.
Norside Cygnus offshore vessel at sunset, supporting wind farm operations in the North Sea.

Not every offshore photograph is planned. Some of the strongest images from a working rotation come from vessels that appear alongside you, or pass at the right moment with the right light behind them.

These two images document support vessels working in a North Sea offshore wind farm. They were photographed on separate occasions but share a common theme: large working vessels in conditions that make the North Sea difficult and the photography interesting.

Island Diligence

The Island Diligence is a construction support and accommodation vessel used across offshore energy projects. Vessels of this class are typically deployed during the active phases of a wind farm build or major maintenance campaign, providing a floating base for large crews operating far from shore. They carry accommodation, workshops, deck space for materials and equipment, and often dynamic positioning capability to hold station without anchoring.

This frame was taken as the vessel was positioned nearby, with a full arc rainbow developing behind it in the aftermath of a passing squall. The combination of the vessel's size, the active sea state, and the rainbow made this one of those moments that required no second-guessing: get the frame, get it clean, move quickly. The light was available for a matter of minutes.

Norside Cygnus

The Norside Cygnus is a service operations vessel, a class of ship purpose-built for offshore wind maintenance campaigns. SOVs carry technicians, tools, and equipment for extended periods at sea, typically operating on a rotation basis with walk-to-work gangway capability for safe platform and turbine access in variable sea states. They are a significant step up in scale and capability from a standard crew transfer vessel, and their presence on site usually indicates a sustained and complex maintenance programme.

This image was taken as the vessel was working nearby at the end of the day, the sunset sky behind it shifting between orange and deep red as the light dropped. The vessel's working decks and superstructure are clearly defined against the sky. As with the Island Diligence frame, the conditions did not repeat themselves.

Photographing vessels from another vessel requires the same approach as any moving-deck photography: timing, stabilisation, and accepting that the window is short. What these two images share, beyond the subject, is that both were taken during operational time rather than a dedicated photography slot. The camera was accessible. The opportunity appeared. The frames exist.

For more from the wind industry, visit the Wind Industry portfolio. Additional offshore and maritime work is in the Oil and Gas Industry gallery.

Offshore Substation

The Hollandse Kust Zuid (HKZ) offshore substation sits in the southern part of the Dutch North Sea — one of the largest offshore wind projects in the Netherlands, operated by Vattenfall and connected to the Dutch grid via TenneT. The substation is the electrical hub of the wind farm, collecting power from the surrounding turbines and transmitting it back to shore via high-voltage cable.

These images show the structure's deck, steel beams, walkways and cable trays framed against open sky and the changing light of an offshore day. There is contrast in the work-worn surfaces, in the reflections where light catches metal, and in the sense of human scale where fittings and handrails appear alongside the larger structural elements.

Also visible in this set are wind turbines within the HKZ array, and the yellow control tower at Ijmuiden on the Dutch coast — a landmark for any vessel transiting in and out of the port.

For more photography from offshore substations and renewables work, visit the Wind Industry gallery & portfolio.