Brasilia Digital TV Tower

The Brasilia Digital TV Tower (Portuguese: Torre de TV Digital de Brasília) is a broadcast tower which made digital television signal available for the whole Federal District and surroundings. It is also known as the “Flor do Cerrado”, the Cerrado flower. Initially planned to open to the public on April 21, 2010, as a celebration of the 50th anniversary of the City of Brasília,[1] the tower was only inaugurated two years later on April 21, 2012.[2]

Brasilia Digital TV Tower
Brasilia Digital TV Tower is a project of Brazilian architect Oscar Niemeyer, one of the remanescent architects of the modernist architecture movement
Alternative namesFlor do Cerrado (Savannah Flower)
General information
StatusComplete
Typeobservation, telecommunications, attraction, restaurant
LocationLago Norte, DF, Brazil
Construction started2009
Completed2012
Height
Antenna spire180 m (590.6 ft)
Roof120 m (393.7 ft)
Top floor80 m (262.5 ft)
Technical details
Floor count62 (equivalent)
Design and construction
ArchitectOscar Niemeyer

The tower was one of the final designs of Brazilian architect Oscar Niemeyer,[3] and cost R$75 million.

The tower is 182 meters tall to the top of the antenna. The enclosed building is reinforced concrete structure for 120 meters, with 50m of metallic structure above that, topped by a 12m television antenna. The main building contains two observatories. The highest one, 80 meters above the ground, contains a restaurant with a panoramic view. The other one is used as an art gallery.[4]

References

  1. Agencia Brasilia, a state-owned communications agency Archived March 26, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved July 27th 2011
  2. Torre de TV Digital de Brasília é inaugurada para visitação Archived April 28, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  3. Pawley, Martin; Glancey, Jonathan (2012-12-05). "Oscar Niemeyer obituary". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2017-06-07.
  4. "Cidades DF - Obra da Torre de Televisão Digital de Brasília deve ser entregue no dia 21 de abril". Correio Braziliense. Retrieved 2011-07-27.
  • Conheça Brasília, a website sponsored by the Ministry of Tourism for the promotion of tourism in Brasília

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