Tower of the Americas | |
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General information | |
Type | Observation tower |
Location | San Antonio, Texas, U.S. |
Coordinates | 29°25′08″N98°29′01″W / 29.418888°N 98.483611°W |
Construction started | August 10, 1966 |
Opening | April 6, 1968 |
Owner | City of San Antonio |
Management | City of San Antonio and Landry's Restaurants |
Height | |
Antenna spire | 750 ft (230 m) |
Roof | 622 ft (190 m) |
Top floor | 579 ft (176 m) |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | Ford, Powell & Carson |
Structural engineer | Feigenspan and Pinnell |
The Tower of the Americas is a 750-foot (229-meter) observation tower-restaurant located in the Hemisfair district on the southeastern portion of Downtown San Antonio, Texas, United States. The tower was designed by San Antonio architect O'Neil Ford [1] and was built as the theme structure of the 1968 World's Fair, HemisFair '68. [2] Originally known as 'HemisFair Tower', [3] it was ultimately named 'the Tower of the Americas' as a result of a name the tower contest created by the executive committee. 68 people submitted the name the tower is now known by. [4]
It was the tallest observation tower in the United States from 1968 until 1996, when the Las Vegas Stratosphere Tower was completed. [5] The tower is the tallest occupiable structure in San Antonio, and it is the 30th-tallest occupiable structure in Texas.
The tower is located in the middle of the former HemisFair '68 site and has an observation deck that is accessible by elevator for a fee. There is also a lounge and revolving restaurant at the top of the tower that provides panoramic views of the city. [6]
The Tower of the Americas, a notable structure in San Antonio, Texas, was conceived as the theme structure for HemisFair '68, a World's Fair held to celebrate the 250th anniversary of San Antonio. [7] Designed by San Antonio architect O’Neil Ford, the construction of the tower began in 1966 and was completed in 18 months, in time for HemisFair '68. [8] The tower, including its antenna, stands 750 feet tall above HemisFair Park. [9]
Construction of the tower was notable for its unique method. The 1.4-million-pound top house, containing observation decks and a restaurant, was built at ground level and then hoisted to the top of the concrete shaft, inch by inch, using twenty-four steel lifting rods. This process took twenty days.
Prior to Landry's, Frontier Enterprises (owner of San Antonio-based Jim's Restaurants) operated the tower of the Americas' restaurant for more than three decades. [10]
Since 1970 the roof has hosted a 30-meter-tall (98 ft) tapered steel mast, used as support for three FM antennas; 101.9 KQXT (then known as KCOR-FM), 102.7 KJXK (then KTFM), and 104.5 KZEP (then KITE-FM). In 2007, the three individual antennas were replaced by a 16-bay master antenna that radiates all three FM signals including the HD signal for KQXT. Clear Channel Radio and Electronics Research Inc. headed up the project along with their contractors and involved the City of San Antonio and Landry's Restaurants. The new antenna system improved coverage for all three radio stations. An option existed for several years to add facilities for a move in signal on 97.7 (requiring rearrangement of ten other stations) to share the site. This was organized by Bret Huggins and David Stewart of Rawhide Radio, LLC (partly owned by Hispanic Broadcasting now Univision radio).
Transmitters are located between the public areas of the observation deck and the revolving restaurant in equipment bays along with air conditioners and plumbing.
The fastest recorded time up the tower's 952 steps is 5 minutes 18 seconds on January 29, 1981. [11] This is one of two observation towers in Texas; the other being the Reunion Tower in Dallas.
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