KVLY-TV mast
Encyclopedia : K : KV : KVL : KVLY-TV mast
The KVLY-TV mast (formerly the KTHI-TV mast) is a television transmitting tower in North Dakota, USA, used by Fargo station KVLY channel 11. At 2,063 ft (628.8 m), it is currently the world's tallest supported structure on land.
Overview
The tower is located three miles west of Blanchard, North Dakota (at ), which is roughly halfway between Fargo and Grand Forks. It became the tallest artificial structure upon the completion of its construction on August 13, 1963. The mast was surpassed in height by 18 m (57 ft) in 1974 by the Warszawa radio mast near Konstantynow, Poland, but it collapsed on August 8, 1991, making the KVLY mast again the tallest structure on land. If completed as planned, the UAE's Burj Dubai, presently slated for completion in 2008, will surpass the mast as the tallest land structure.The tower was built by Hamilton Directors and Kline Iron and Steel, and took thirty days to complete, at a cost of US$500,000 ($3.2 million in 2005 dollars).
Owned by the Meyer Broadcasting Company (now North Dakota Television, LLC) of Bismarck, the tower broadcasts at 316 kW for television station KVLY (channel 11, an NBC affiliate) which is based in Fargo. The tower provides a broadcast area of roughly 30,000 square miles (78,000 km2).
Its overall height above mean sea level is 926 m (3,038 ft). Some time after its completion, the Federal Aviation Administration imposed a limit of 2,063 ft, based on this tower's height, on future construction; consequently, no taller structures may legally be built in the U.S. at present.
The call letters of the television station for which it was built were originally KTHI, the "HI" referring to the height of the mast. The top is reachable by service elevator or ladder.
Images
See also
- List of masts, Table of masts
- List of radio stations
- Tallest structures in the U.S.
- World's tallest structures
- List of the world's tallest structures
Structures of similar height
- KXJB Tower (2060 ft - 627.8 m)
- KXTV/KOVR Tower (2049 ft - 624.5 m)
External links
- [Structurae: KVLY Tower]
- [Tower web page at KVLY-TV]
- [FCC listing]
- [Listing on the Skyscraper Page]
- http://www.skyscraperpage.com/diagrams/?b471
- http://www.pbase.com/talshiarr/kvly
- [Satellite image of the KVLY-TV tower]
Under construction: Abraj Al Bait Towers | Al Hamra Tower | Al Rajhi Tower | Bank of America Tower, New York City | Burj Dubai | City Hall and City Duma | Federation Tower | Freedom Tower (One World Trade Center) | International Commerce Centre | New York Times Tower | Rose Rotana Suites | Shanghai World Financial Center | Trump International Hotel and Tower (Chicago) | Trump International Hotel and Tower (Toronto) | Waterview Tower
Proposed: Al Burj | Buenos Aires Forum | Burj al Alam | Fordham Spire | Mubarak al-Kabir Tower | Plaza Rakyat | Russia Tower | Shard London Bridge
Destroyed: World Trade Center | Construction suspended: Ryugyong Hotel
Visions: 7 South Dearborn | Pyramid City | Sky City 1000 | The Illinois | X-Seed 4000
Observation towers: Borj-e Milad | Central TV Tower | CN Tower | Eiffel Tower | Fernsehturm | KCTV-Tower | Liberation Tower | Macau Tower | Kuala Lumpur Tower | Oriental Pearl Tower | Ostankino Tower | Riga Radio and TV Tower | Sky Tower | Space Needle | Stratosphere Las Vegas | Sydney Tower | Tianjin Radio and Television Tower | Tallinn TV Tower | Tashkent Tower | Tokyo Tower | Tower of the Americas | Torrena |Vilnius TV Tower
Antennas: Alma-Ata Tower | Azeri TV Tower | Emley Moor | Europaturm | Gerbrandy Tower | Kiev TV Tower | Mumbai Television Tower | Saint Petersburg TV Tower | Sumida Tower (proposed) | TV Tower Yerevan | WITI TV Tower | Zendstation Smilde
Chimneys: GRES-2 Power Station | Endesa Termic | Homer City Generating Station | Inco Superstack | Kennecott Smokestack | Maritza East Power Station | Mitchell Power Plant | Mountaineer Power Plant | Plomin Power Station | Power Station Westerholt | Syrdarya Power Plant | Teruel Power Plant | TETs5 | Trbovlje Chimney
Oil platforms: Petronius Platform | Troll Platform | Hibernia Oil Platform
Other proposed structures
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
