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The Senior Road Tower is a guyed mast for FM and TV broadcasting, measuring 1,971 feet (601 m) tall, located in unincorporated northeastern Fort Bend County near Missouri City, Texas, United States. The present mast was built in 1983. It replaced a previous tower that collapsed in a construction accident in December 1982, killing five workers.
As a result, WALB's tower collapsed. A new tower for both WALB and WFXL was later constructed, which began broadcasting on July 3, 2007, at 11:35 p.m. [22] Torre VIP de Rádio & TV, São Bernardo do Campo, Brazil August 23, 2006: Guyed steel lattice mast 174 Maintenance One person was killed WACS-TV tower March 1, 2007: Guyed steel lattice mast 329
A failure in a clamping device on the hoisting mechanism caused a 75-foot (23 m) section of antenna to fall off, severing a guy wire and leading to the tower's collapse. Five people, all tower workers employed by a New Jersey company, died. KTXH suffered a $1.5 million loss in equipment, including the transmitter, on which the falling mast ...
The moment a helicopter crashed into a radio tower in Houston, Texas, on Sunday night (20 October) was caught on a security camera. Footage showed the moment of the crash when the helicopter was ...
The crash happened near Engelke Street and North Ennis Street just before 8 p.m. when a helicopter slammed into a communication tower behind homes in Houston’s Second Ward, causing a large ...
KXAS TV Tower: Cedar Hill, Texas Guyed Mast 467.2 m Malrite Communications Tower Green Acres: Greenacres, Florida: Guyed Mast 468 m KXTX TV Tower: Cedar Hill, Texas Guyed Mast 467.6 m Richland Towers Tower Lonsdale: Lonsdale, Tennessee: Guyed Mast 467 m Lewis JR Tower 1 Bloomingdale, Georgia: Guyed Mast 466.6 m WTOC TV Tower: Savannah, Georgia ...
A base jumper attempted to jump off a local news station's TV tower in St. Louis, Missouri, but got a little tangled up in the process. The man ended up hanging at least 125 feet in the air off ...
The tower held the antennas for KXTX-TV and four local FM radio stations. [80] Channel 39 was off the air for eight days before returning using an auxiliary antenna on KXAS-TV's tower. [81] LIN and the tower services company sued each other in the wake of the collapse; the two companies reached an out-of-court settlement in 1998. [82]