KVLY-TV mast

KVLY-TV mast
KVLY-TV mast
Location within North Dakota
General information
Type TV transmission tower (effective radiated power = 316 kW)
Location Blanchard, Traill County, North Dakota, U.S.
Coordinates 47°20′32″N 97°17′21″W / 47.34222°N 97.28917°W / 47.34222; -97.28917Coordinates: 47°20′32″N 97°17′21″W / 47.34222°N 97.28917°W / 47.34222; -97.28917
Completed August 13, 1963
Owner Gray Television
Height 628.8 m (2,063 ft)
Design and construction
Architect Hamilton Directors
Main contractor Kline Iron and Steel
Tallest structures in the world. (Note: KXJB-TV has since been renamed KRDK-TV.)

The KVLY-TV mast (formerly the KTHI-TV mast) is a 2,063-foot-tall (629 m) television-transmitting mast in Blanchard, Traill County, North Dakota, United States, used by Fargo station KVLY-TV channel 11. Completed during 1963, it was the tallest structure in the world until succeeded by the Warsaw radio mast during 1974, which collapsed in 1991, again making the KVLY-TV mast the tallest structure in the world until the Burj Khalifa exceeded it in 2008. It remains the fourth-tallest structure in the world (since the construction of the Tokyo Skytree and the Shanghai Tower), the tallest structure in the Western Hemisphere, and the tallest broadcasting mast in the world.

Location

Location of KVLY-TV Mast.

The mast is located 3 miles (4.8 km) west of Blanchard, North Dakota, halfway between Fargo and Grand Forks. It became the tallest artificial structure, and the first man-made structure to exceed 2,000 feet (610 m) in height, upon the completion of its construction on August 13, 1963.

Construction

The tower was built by Hamilton Erection Company of York, South Carolina and Kline Iron and Steel, and required thirty days to complete, at a cost of US$500,000 (roughly $4 million today).

Owners

Owned by Gray Television of Atlanta, Georgia, the tower broadcasts at 356 kW on channel 44 for television station KVLY-TV (channel 11 PSIP, an NBC/CBS affiliate) which is based in Fargo. The tower provides a broadcast area of roughly 9,700 square miles (25,000 km2) which is a radius of about 55.6 miles (89.5 km).

When the mast was built the call letters of the television station for which it was built were changed to KTHI, the "HI" referring to the height of the mast. The top is reachable by a two-person service elevator (built by Park Manufacturing of Charlotte, North Carolina) or ladder.

Specifications

The tower consists of two parts: a lattice tower of 1,950 feet (590 m);[1] topped by a transmitting array of 113 feet (34 m). The total height of both is 2,063 feet (629 m). The antenna weighs 9,000 pounds (4,100 kg), the lattice tower weighs 855,500 pounds (388,000 kg), giving a total weight of 864,500 pounds (392,100 kg). It takes up 160 acres (0.65 km2) of land with its guy anchors.[2][3] Its height above mean sea level is 3,038 feet (926 m).

Federal rule change

Some time after its completion, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) imposed a policy that states, "Although there is no absolute height limit for antenna towers, both agencies have established a rebuttable presumption against structures over 2,000 feet above ground level."[4] The FCC and FAA may approve a taller structure in "exceptional cases."

Images

Structures of similar height

See also

References

  1. "N.D. TV Tower No Longer World's Tallest". All Things Considered. NPR.org. 5 January 2010. Retrieved 2011-12-06.
  2. "KVLY-TV Tower". Emporis. Retrieved 2011-12-06.
  3. "Info". Valleynewslive.com. Archived from the original on August 6, 2010.
  4. "Antenna Tower Lighting and Marking Requirements". Federal Communications Commission. Retrieved 2018-09-29.
  • KVLY Tower at Structurae
  • Tower web page at KVLY-TV
  • "Listing 1046244". Antenna Structure Registration database. U.S. Federal Communications Commission.
  • Listing on the Skyscraper Page
  • Drawings of KVLY/KTHI TV Mast from the Skyscraper Page
  • KVLY and KXJB Towers from PBPhase.com
  • Video of the KVLY Tower, summer 2009 from YouTube
Records
Preceded by
WIMZ-FM-Tower
World's tallest structure
2,063 ft (628.8 m)

1963–1974
Succeeded by
Warsaw radio mast
Preceded by
Warsaw radio mast

1991–2008
Succeeded by
Burj Khalifa
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