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Collapse of three towers, following collapse of larger single tower at same site by straight-line winds on 20 April 2000 KETV TV Tower July 2003: Guyed steel lattice mast 415 Reconstruction work WIFR TV tower July 5, 2003: Guyed steel lattice mast 222 Storm WAAY-TV - TV Mast, Huntsville, Alabama, US September 4, 2003: Guyed steel lattice mast 305
WSM-TV Tower: Nashville ... Radio tower: 1958: Collapse of the Ochsenkopf ... Palmerah West Jakarta four-story building collapse Jakarta, Indonesia: Building 11 ...
Trans7 is the licensed broadcaster for MotoGP in Indonesia for more than 20 years since 2002 and will continue until 2026 after obtaining a broadcast rights extension. [10] Starting from the 2022 season and the opening of Mandalika International Street Circuit, Trans7 will also broadcast the Superbike World Championship. [11]
A large transmission tower collapsed into the Congaree River. This nonprofit says it belongs to this utility. Utility transmission tower collapses into Congaree River, according to riverkeeper
Until 8 August 1991, the Warsaw radio mast was the world's tallest supported structure on land; its collapse left the KVLY / KTHI-TV mast as the tallest. There are over 50 radio structures in the United States that are 600 m ( 1 968.5 ft ) or taller.
Lighting on a Houston radio tower reportedly failed just days before it was hit by a helicopter on Sunday, killing four people in a fiery explosion that toppled the tower and left debris scattered ...
It is currently the tallest structure in Indonesia. It consists of a 375 metre tall lattice structure with a side length of 6.3 m (20.7 ft), which carries on its top a 20 m (65.6 ft) high TV-broadcasting antenna. The upper parts of the mast are guyed to a 120 m (390 ft) triangular lattice steel structure with a side length of 56 m (183.7 ft ...
The Warsaw Radio Mast (centre) from a distance (as pictured in 1989) Warsaw Radio Mast compared with some other tall structures The Warsaw Radio Mast (Polish: Maszt radiowy w Warszawie) was a radio mast located near GÄ…bin, Poland, and was the world's tallest structure at 2,120 ft (646.30 m) from 1974 until its collapse on 8 August 1991. [1]