The Landmark Tower Company was based out of Fort Worth, Texas and founded by Henry “Hank” McGinnis. The company was known for designing and building a type of radio tower known by the same name.[1] McGinnis, who had previous experience building electric transmission line towers, evidently came up with the unique design while scribbling a Christian symbol of a fish on a napkin.[2]
Tower design
editThe prototypical Landmark tower, also known as an Adelphon tower, is a tripod in shape with three legs that rise to meet each other about a third of the way up. The legs taper down from larger footings to a thinner middle and then expand again to the point where they meet. The outer cords continue all the way up to the top of the tower in one swoop, but the inner three loop around into each other, creating a central ovoid and voided core. Aside from its unique appearance, the Landmark tower design has several advantages compared to the typical free standing lattice tower, with less wind resistance and a reduced amount of steel required for construction.[3]
List of towers
editThe most well known example is the Star Tower, located in Cincinnati, Ohio. The individual base leg columns were erected by crane, while the upper sections of the tower were built using a Sikorsky S-64 helicopter.[4] Numerous other Landmark towers can found across the United States, including the Mesquite Tower in Mesquite, Texas, the Hughes Memorial Tower in Washington, D.C., and, at a smaller scale, WPXR-TV's analog antenna on Poor Mountain in Virginia, and another atop the Energy Plaza skyscraper in downtown Dallas, used by TXU Energy for its communications needs. None are known to have been built outside of the United States. The Adelphon Tower Company (Henry McGinnis) wrote bankruptcy on Prime Contractor Pyramid Tower & others in 1991 as Star 64 was completed. Many others were listed in the Chapter 7. The Landmark Tower Company went bankrupt as Henry's wife attempted to continue after Henry McGinnis passed on in 2002.[5]
Tower | Year | Country | Town | Height m | Height ft | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Star Tower | 1991 | USA | Cincinnati, Ohio | 291 m | 954 ft | Tallest Landmark Tower ever built, assembled by helicopter |
Hughes Memorial Tower | 1989 | USA | Washington, DC | 232 m | 761 ft | Tallest structure in Washington DC |
WCCV TV Tower, also known as; Torre Yiye Avila | 1991 | USA | Utuado, Puerto Rico | 167 m | 548 ft | Formerly the tallest freestanding structure in Puerto Rico. Collapsed caused by Hurricane Maria September 2017[6] |
WLLY Tower[7][8] | 1995[2] | USA | Mangonia Park, Florida | 158.2 m | 519 ft | |
Mesquite Tower | 1990 | USA | Mesquite, Texas | 155.3 m | 509.5 ft | |
Cumulus Media Tower[9][10] | <2002 | USA | Shreveport, Louisiana | 152 m | 499 ft | |
Tower at 3551 J.R. Lynch Street (Extension)[11] | <1996 | USA | Jackson, Mississippi | 152 m | 499 ft | |
Telecourier Communications Tower[12] | 1989 | USA | Bloomington, Illinois | 152 m | 418 ft | |
WPXR TV Tower[13][14][15] | <1996 | USA | Roanoke County, Virginia | 74.5 m | 244 ft | Poor Mountain Tower removed by 2017 |
Energy Plaza | ? | USA | Dallas, Texas | 33 m | 108 ft | |
Ministerio Cristo Viene Tower | USA | Utuado, Puerto Rico | shorter landmark tower of unknown height [16] |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Henry J. McGinnis Obituary (2002) the Dallas Morning News".
- ^ a b John Kelly (2014-05-25) [2014-05-24]. "D.C.'s tallest tower is named for a former police officer and has a secret Jesus fish built into its design". The Washington Post. Washington, D.C. ISSN 0190-8286. OCLC 1330888409.[please check these dates]
- ^ "Ohio Transmission Tower as Object of Beauty | Architect Magazine".
- ^ "Building the Star Tower with Helicopter".
- ^ "Thirty years of Landmark Tower records to be disposed of following bankruptcy". Retrieved 3 December 2023.
- ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Ávila Antenna in roncador Utuado. YouTube.
- ^ "FCCInfo Structure Registration Results". www.fccinfo.com.
- ^ "WLLY-FM 99.5 MHZ - Palm Beach Gardens, FL".
- ^ "Radio stations in Shreveport, Louisiana".
- ^ "FCCInfo Structure Registration Results". www.fccinfo.com.
- ^ "FCCInfo Structure Registration Results". www.fccinfo.com.
- ^ "FCCInfo Structure Registration Results". www.fccinfo.com.
- ^ "A selection from a decade of visits to tower and studio sites in the Northeast and beyond".
- ^ "A selection from a decade of visits to tower and studio sites in the Northeast and beyond". www.fybush.com.
- ^ "TV Query Results -- Video Division (FCC) USA".
- ^ "Ministerio Cristo Viene · Carretara Rd 2 Km 96, Carr Puerto Rico 2, Membrillo, 00627, Puerto Rico".