Sutro Tower
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sutro Tower | |
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Sutro Tower viewed from Grandview Park in San Francisco
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General information | |
Status | Complete |
Type | Radio mast |
Location | San Francisco, California |
Address | 1 La Avanzada Drive Clarendon Heights |
Coordinates | 37.7552°N 122.4528°W |
Elevation | 254.2 m (834 ft) |
Completed | 4 July 1973 |
Owner | Sutro Tower, Inc. |
Height | |
Antenna spire | 297.8 m (977 ft)[1] |
Observatory | on Level 6, 228.8 m (751 ft) above base |
Dimensions | |
Other dimensions |
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Technical details | |
Structural system | Truss tower |
Design and construction | |
Architect | Furman L. Anderson, Jr.[2] |
Architecture firm |
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Renovating team | |
Engineer | Simpson Gumpertz & Heger |
Website | |
sutrotower | |
References | |
[3][4][5] |
Sutro Tower is a 977 ft (298 m) three-pronged TV and radio antenna tower in San Francisco, CA. Rising from a hill between Twin Peaks and Mount Sutro near Clarendon Heights, it is a prominent feature of the city skyline and a landmark for city residents and visitors.
Contents
[hide]History[edit]
Before the construction of Sutro Tower in 1973, television reception in San Francisco was spotty because the many hills of the city blocked the line-of-sight television signal. The great height of the new tower helped to resolve that problem. Transmitters had been scattered throughout the Bay Area, including at San Bruno Mountain, Mt. Allison, Monument Peak, and Mt. Diablo. By having all the main Bay Area television station transmitters in one location, reception was improved by allowing a receiving antenna pointed in a single direction to receive all those stations rather than a subset.
Local residents opposed the tower even before it was completed, including criticism of the aesthetic effect the tower would have on the rest of San Francisco. San Francisco writer Herb Caen once wrote, "I keep waiting for it to stalk down the hill and attack theGolden Gate Bridge."[6] Acknowledging both displeasure and affection for its undeniable prominence on the city's skyline, it is sometimes referred to light-heartedly as the Sutro Monster[7] or Space Claw.[8][9]
When first built, the long legs of the tower were illuminated at night with long tubes of white light that looked like long fluorescent tubes. However, public outcry resulted in the lights being removed soon after they were turned on.[citation needed]
Despite the initial revulsion of some residents, Sutro Tower is now recognized by many as a Bay Area icon, it appears in local art, television shows, and movies[citation needed] as one of the architectural symbols of the city. The tower is featured in video games, business logos, on clothing, as furniture[10] and even tattoos.[11] The U.S. band Information Society used it on the cover of their album 'Don't Be Afraid'. A local entertainment guide, SF Station, uses it as a logo, as do the collaborative art game SFZero and theExpose SF art competition.
Construction[edit]
This section does not cite any sources. (March 2015) |
Construction commenced in 1971 by Kline Towers of Columbia, South Carolina, and the tower was completed in 1973, with the first transmissions on July 4, 1973. Approximately 3,750 m3 (132,000 cu ft) of concrete were used to make the foundation of the 3.7 million pound (1,700 ton) tower. Earthquake proofing includes ballasting two thirds of the weight of the structure below ground, resulting in a center of gravity at sixteen feet below ground level. It is used to transmit the signals of eleven television stations and four FM radio stations and for various other communications services.
The tower is owned by Sutro Tower Inc., which in turn is owned by a consortium of the four major television broadcasters in San Francisco at the time of its construction: KTVU (previously owned by Cox Enterprises, now owned by Fox Television Stations); KRON-TV (owned by the San Francisco Chronicle at the time of the tower's completion, now owned by Media General); KPIX (a former Westinghouse Broadcasting property, now owned byCBS); and KGO-TV (an ABC-owned station). Sutro Tower also leases space to other Bay Area radio and television stations, including PBS outlet KQED; independent station KOFY-TV; and KBCW, a sister station to KPIX.
Three other major Bay Area TV stations are unable to be located at Sutro Tower—the NBC-owned duopoly ofKNTV and KSTS; and KTVU's duopoly partner KICU-TV. KNTV, which assumed the area's NBC affiliation from KRON-TV in 2002, relocated its transmitter from Loma Prieta Peak to San Bruno Mountain, five miles south of Sutro Tower; KSTS and KICU-TV transmit from east of Fremont. Those locations allow these stations to maintain primary coverage over San Jose and the South Bay—San Jose is the city of license for all three stations.
Named after Adolph Sutro, a businessman and former mayor of San Francisco who had a mansion located about 100 feet away from where the tower is now located, it is built on one of the highest peaks in the city. The tower stands 297.8 m (977 ft) above ground and 552 m (1,811 ft) above sea level. It is the tallest structure in the city, surpassing the 258.4 m (848 ft) Transamerica Pyramid by more than 39 m (128 ft). The old site of the Sutro Mansion, and thus the land on which the tower stands, is owned by Adolph Sutro's descendants.[citation needed]
Access[edit]
The facility is accessible only by authorized vehicles. The area near the site offers beautiful panoramic viewpoints of San Francisco. There is a platform near the top of the tower, 232 m (761 ft) above ground and 486.2 m (1,595 ft) above sea level. Only authorized maintenance workers can access the tower via a small two-person elevator that runs inside the west tower enclosed leg. There is no public access within the Sutro Tower property lines.
On a clear day, the tower can be seen from the East Bay peak of Mount Diablo and is sometimes the only part of San Francisco seen above the coastal fog when it is blown inland, typically on summer mornings and evenings.
Stations[edit]
Television[edit]
TV stations that transmit from Sutro Tower include the following. As most of these stations carry additional subchannels on their frequencies, only their main affiliations on the .1 subchannel are listed here. Subchannel affiliations are shown via the Digital channels link.
Callsign | Virtual Channel | Physical Channel | Affiliation | Digital channels |
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KTVU | 2 | 44 | Fox | 2.1-2.4 |
KRON | 4 | 38 | MyNetworkTV | 4.1-4.3 |
KPIX | 5 | 29 | CBS | 5.1-5.2 |
KGO | 7 | 7 | ABC | 7.1-7.3 |
KQED | 9 | 30 | PBS | 9.1-9.3 |
KOFY | 20 | 19 | Ind. | 20.1-20.4 |
KMTP | 32 | 33 | Multilingual Ind. | 32.1-32.6 |
KCNS | 38 | 39 | MundoMax | 38.1-38.6 |
KBCW | 44 | 45 | The CW | 44.1 |
KCSM | 60 | 43 | Public Ind. | 60.1-60.3 |
KFSF | 66 | 34 | UniMás | 66.1-66.4 |
Radio[edit]
FM stations that transmit from Sutro Tower include the following:
Callsign | Frequency | Format | Owner |
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KOIT-FM | 96.5 | Lite Rock | Entercom |
KSOL-FM | 98.9 | Regional Mexican | Univision |
KOSF-FM | 103.7 | Classic Hits | Clear Channel |
KFOG-FM | 104.5 | Triple-A | Cumulus Media |
In popular culture[edit]
The tower is an important presence in the 1977 San Francisco horror novel Our Lady of Darkness by Fritz Leiber.
The video game Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, set in a fictionalized San Francisco, contains a radio tower that bears a striking resemblance to Sutro Tower. Versions of the tower are also seen in Midway's 1997 game San Francisco Rush and Need for Speed Underground 2.
The MMORPG Defiance includes Sutro Tower as the location of the mission Turret Turnabout.
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