Location | Kleve, Germany |
---|---|
Mast height | 126.4 metres (415 ft) |
Coordinates | 51°47′11″N6°06′40″E / 51.78639°N 6.11111°E Coordinates: 51°47′11″N6°06′40″E / 51.78639°N 6.11111°E |
Built | 1953 |
Kleve transmitter is a facility for FM and TV transmission (until 1993 also medium wave transmission) of the WDR near Kleve in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. The Kleve transmitter was founded in 1953.
Since 1994, the transmitter uses as a transmission tower a 126.4 metre (414.6 ft) high guyed steel tube mast. The mast is guyed at 57 meters (187 ft) and 101.6 metres (333.2 ft) above ground. This mast replaced the old radio mast from the 1960s which was also used for transmissions in the medium wave range until 1993.
The Warsaw Radio Mast was a radio mast located near Gąbin, Poland, and the world's tallest structure at 646.38 metres (2,120.7 ft) from 1974 until its collapse on 8 August 1991. Designed by Jan Polak, and one of the last radio masts built under Communist rule, the mast was conceived for height and ability to broadcast the "propaganda of the successes" to remote areas such as Antarctica. It is the second tallest structure ever built, being surpassed as the tallest by the Burj Khalifa tower in the United Arab Emirates, completed in 2009.
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The Lakihegy Tower is a 314-metre-high (1,031 ft) radio mast at Szigetszentmiklós-Lakihegy in Hungary. The Blaw-Knox type tower was built in 1933 and was one of Europe's tallest structures at the time of construction. It was designed to provide broadcast coverage for Hungary with a 120 kW transmitter. It was built for the purpose of transmitting the radio station "Budapest I.", which it served until 1977.
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