Kyiv TV Tower
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The Kyiv TV Tower (Template:Langx) is a Template:Convert lattice metal tower<ref name = em>Template:Cite web</ref> on Oranzhereina Street, Kyiv, Ukraine, and is the tallest structure in the country.<ref name = sky /> The tower was built in 1973 while Kyiv was the capital of the Ukrainian SSR.<ref name = LBC /> The tower was the tallest freestanding metal structure in the world.<ref name="em" /><ref name="sky">Template:SkyscraperPage</ref> It is used for radio and television broadcasting and is not open to the public.<ref name="em" /> It is the tallest lattice tower in the world and third tallest structure in Europe.
History
The tower was first designed for Moscow, then the Soviet capital. But Moscow authorities preferred a more "solid" type of tower, which was eventually built (Ostankino Tower). Later, when Kyiv needed its own tower, the project was reintroduced. The Soviet government ordered the engineers to shorten the tower by almost 30%, so as not to be as tall as the Moscow one.<ref>В. Стах, "Викрадачі спокою наших осель", Україна Молода, #191, 14 October 2005 (in Ukrainian)</ref><ref>І. Мащенко, "Гулівери земних споруд", Zerkalo Nedeli, #16 (340) 21–27 April 2001 (in Ukrainian) Template:Webarchive</ref>
Location
The tower was built on top of the Jewish cemetery in Lukianivka. The cemetery was officially closed in 1966 and Jewish families were given six months to rebury their relatives in the Jewish areas of a new cemetery in the city. Since the relatives of the interred had been killed in the Babyn Yar massacre, most of the graves were not moved. After the headstones had been destroyed or removed, the antenna was built on top of the existing graves.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Construction
Construction began in 1968<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and finished in 1973<ref name = sky /> at a cost of approximately $12 million. Made of steel pipe of various diameters and thicknesses, the structure weighs Template:Convert. The central pipe, or core, where the elevator is located, is Template:Convert in diameter and made of pipe that is 12 mm thick. It sits on a four-legged base that is about Template:Convert meters tall. Atop the base is an enclosed level which houses microwave transmitting and receiving equipment. At about Template:Convert is a second enclosed level that houses television and FM transmitters, as well as a control and maintenance shop. This second level is the elevator's terminus.Template:Citation needed
The tower is unique in that no mechanical fasteners such as rivets are used in the structure: every joint, pipe, and fixture is attached by welding. It is the first all-welded tower in the world.<ref name = sky />
2022 missile strike
File:Rocket strike on Kyiv TV Tower, 1 March 2022.webm
On 1 March 2022, the tower was hit by a missile fired by Russian forces during the Battle of Kyiv as part of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> According to Ukrainian officials, five people were killed as a result.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The dead included Yevhenii Sakun, the first journalist killed in the Russian invasion of Ukraine.<ref name="cjr-sakun">Template:Cite news</ref> Ukraine state advisor Anton Herashchenko accused the Russian army of trying to disrupt the city's communication infrastructure.<ref name = LBC>Template:Cite news</ref> According to The Kyiv Independent, Ukrainian TV channels' broadcasting was disrupted following the attack.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> It is unknown if the strike intended to topple the tower or if the intent was to disable its transmission and reception systems. The extent of the damage was not immediately apparent, and the tower remained standing.
The Ukrainian foreign ministry condemned the attack due to its proximity to the memorial to the Babi Yar massacres. The Babyn Yar Holocaust Memorial Center confirmed reports that a second missile had hit the nearby memorial,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> however there are contradicting reports.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
See also
- Lattice tower
- List of tallest towers in the world
- List of tallest structures in Europe
- List of tallest freestanding structures in the world
- List of tallest freestanding steel structures
- List of transmission sites
References
External links
- Template:Commons category-inline
- Template:Structurae
- members.lycos.nl – Kyiv Central Radio TV Tower
- Template:Usurped – Kyiv TV Tower
- Russian Strike on the Kyiv TV tower. In: forensic-architecture.org, 10 June 2022 (with video).
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- Jewish cemeteries in Ukraine
- Jewish cemeteries
- Towers completed in 1973
- Towers in Ukraine
- Radio masts and towers in Europe
- Tourist attractions in Kyiv
- Buildings and structures in Kyiv
- Towers built in the Soviet Union
- Lattice towers
- 1973 establishments in Ukraine
- Buildings and structures destroyed during the Russian invasion of Ukraine
- Northern front of the Russian invasion of Ukraine
- Articles containing video clips
- Kyiv in the Russian invasion of Ukraine