The Huizen transmitter was one of the first large-scale radio transmitting stations to be built in the Netherlands.
Location | Rotonde Blaricummerstraat - Randweg Midden, Huizen |
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Coordinates | 52°17′15.04″N 5°14′32.38″E / 52.2875111°N 5.2423278°E |
Built | 1923 |
Demolished | 1940 |
History
editIt was opened in 1923 as an experimental 500-watt transmitter, and its power was increased to 5000 watts in 1926.
The original Huizen transmitter towers were well-known local landmarks, frequently depicted on postcards. In 1935, however, they were demolished following the erection of a mast radiator near Hilversum.
In 1937 what were possibly the world's first rotating shortwave transmission antennas were erected at Huizen, consisting of two wooden 60-metre high towers. They were demolished in 1940 by retreating Dutch troops during the German invasion of the Netherlands. A replica of the shortwave antennas today stands on a traffic roundabout in Huizen.