4QB Transmitter Towers
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Pialba transmitters demolished after 43
years
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The Pialba transmitters, before eleven o'clock on Tuesday morning. |
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Going... With some of the cables holding the masts in place severed, the tension in the other wires pulled the towers over. |
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Going... The shots went off just moments apart, and both masts fell together. |
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Gone. The transmitters kick up a cloud of dust as they hit the ground. |
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After 43 years in service, the ABC's recently decommissioned Pialba transmitters in Hervey Bay were demolished this morning.
Back in 1964, the site was in the middle of nowhere. But today,
the block of land just a few hundred metres from the beachfront is worth a great
deal of money.
In December last year the transmitters were decommissioned, when the new
facility in nearby Dundowran was switched on. With all broadcasting now coming
from the new site, it was time to say goodbye to the old radio masts.
The old masts were 137 metres tall - that would have been called 455 feet back
when they were built.
Demolition crews used six kilograms of explosives to sever the guide cables on
one side of both masts. Then, the tension in the remaining cables pulled the
masts down.
It was a textbook demolition, with the towers landing exactly where planned. The
State Emergency Service was on standby and several local roads blocked off to
ensure bystanders' safety, since the site is in the middle of a residential
area.
Residents in the area were warned before the demolition, and a small crowd of
locals and radio enthusiasts turned out, cameras in hand, to bid farewell to the
transmitters.
After so many years, the masts have become local landmarks. Many fishermen out
at sea used the red flashing lights on top of the towers as beacons to find
their way home.
At 10:57 this morning, the time had come. Three warning sirens were given before
the shotfirer did his work and a few minutes later, the masts fell slowly to
earth.
Meanwhile, life goes on at the new transmitter site on Sorrensens Road,
Dundowran. It's a rural area, and the new masts jut out of a landscape dominated
by canefields, bush, and the occasional goat.
But in 43 years, it might be a different story...
Friday, 19. June 2009 09:04:39 PM, AEST
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