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Emley Moor transmitting station

The Emley Moor transmitting station[1] is a telecommunications and broadcasting facility on Emley Moor,[1] 1 mile (1.6 km) west of the village centre of Emley,[n 1] in Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, England.

Arqiva Emley Moor Tower
Emley Moor transmitting station (West Yorkshire)
Tower height319 m (1,047 ft)
Coordinates53°36′43″N 1°39′52″W / 53.611944°N 1.664444°W / 53.611944; -1.664444
Grid referenceSE222128
Built1969–1971
BBC regionBBC Yorkshire
ITV regionITV Yorkshire
Local TV serviceLocal TV Leeds
That's York

It is made up of a 1,047 ft (319 m)[1] concrete tower and apparatus that began to transmit in 1971. It is protected under UK law as a Grade II listed building. It is the tallest freestanding structure in the United Kingdom,[1][2] and 25th tallest tower in the world.[1] It was the seventh tallest freestanding structure and was fourth tallest tower in the European Union before Brexit.[1] When built it was the sixth tallest freestanding structure in the world after the Ostankino Tower, the Empire State Building, 875 North Michigan Avenue (known as The John Hancock Center), the Berliner Fernsehturm and Tokyo Tower.[3]

The tower's current official name, The Arqiva Tower, is shown on a sign beside the offices at the base of the tower, but it is commonly known just as "Emley Moor Mast".[1]

In 2021, the antenna was removed due to technical errors and it was replaced by a shorter antenna of 11 m (36 ft) but the structure still remains the tallest freestanding structure in the United Kingdom.

History edit

Emley Moor has been a transmission site since the earliest days of commercial television in the UK. The present concrete tower is the third antenna support structure to have occupied the site.

The first permanent transmitter built there was for ITV, covering much of the north of England. It had a 443 feet (135 m) lattice tower, which provided limited coverage. This original 443-foot (135 m) lattice tower was erected in 1956 to provide Independent Television broadcasts to the Yorkshire area. It entered service on 3 November 1956, transmitting Granada Television programmes on weekdays, and ABC TV programmes at weekends.

Second mast and collapse edit

In 1964, in anticipation of colour PAL transmissions set to begin in 1966, the original 443-foot (135 m) lattice tower was replaced by a taller 1,265-foot (385.5 m) guyed mast, identical to the structure at Belmont transmitting station in Lincolnshire, at 53°36′46″N 1°39′58″W / 53.612700°N 1.666078°W / 53.612700; -1.666078 (see map on mb21 - The Transmission Gallery). The dismantled lattice tower was rebuilt at Craigkelly transmitting station.[4] Yorkshire Television commenced broadcasting from the Emley Moor transmitter following the reorganisation of the ITV franchises on 29 July 1968.

The guy-supported tubular mast was constructed from curved steel segments to form a 9 feet (2.75 m) diameter tube, 902 feet (275 m) long, and was surmounted by a lattice section 351 feet (107 m) tall, and a capping cylinder, bringing the total height to 1,265 feet (385.5 m). At the time of its construction, it was one of the tallest human-made structures in the world. It was designed by British Insulated Callender's Cables (BICC), and manufactured by EMI, and built by J. L. Eve Construction.

Its ropes weighed 85 long tons (86 t), made by British Ropes, with steel from Steel, Peech and Tozer of Templeborough in South Yorkshire. The column weighed 210 long tons (210 t) and had 375 segments, with steel from United Steel Companies at Scunthorpe in northern Lincolnshire.[5]

The cylindrical steel mast was regularly coated in ice during the winter, and large icicles formed on the guy wires, placing them under great strain. During winter, ice often fell from the guy-wires. For this reason, red warning lights on the tower operated when ice was a hazard, and notices were posted on the fence adjacent to Jagger Lane, below the guy wire crossings.

On 19 March 1969, a combination of strong winds and the weight of ice that had formed around the top of the mast and on the guy wires caused the structure to collapse. The duty engineer wrote the following in the station's log book, demonstrating that failure of the structure was completely unexpected:

  • Day [shift]: Lee, Caffell, Vander Byl [surnames]
  • Ice hazard - Packed ice beginning to fall from mast & stays. Roads close to station temporarily closed by Councils. Please notify councils when roads are safe (!)
  • Pye monitor - no frame lock - V10 replaced (low ins). Monitor overheating due to fan choked up with dust- cleaned out, motor lubricated and fan blades reset.
  • Evening [shift]: Glendenning, Bottom, Redgrove [surnames]
  • 1,265 ft (386 m) Mast :- Fell down across Jagger Lane (corner of Common Lane) at 17:01:45. Police, I.T.A. HQ, R.O., etc., all notified.
  • Mast Power Isolator :- Fuses removed & isolator locked in the "OFF" position. All isolators in basement feeding mast stump also switched off. Dehydrators & TXs switched off.
 
Wreckage of the Emley Moor Mast, which collapsed in March 1969, strewn across fields.

The collapse left sections of twisted mast strewn over the transmitter site, and across the junction of Common Lane and Jagger Lane, and the surrounding fields. Although a falling stay cable cut through the roof of a local church[6] and across the transmitter site buildings, no one was injured. It completely disabled the BBC2 UHF transmitter and the ITV VHF transmitter, leaving several million people without service. BBC1 VHF television transmissions continued from Holme Moss. The Independent Television Authority (ITA) owned a collapsible emergency mast, 200 feet (61 m) tall, which was moved to Emley from the Lichfield transmitting station so that some service could be restored. ITV signals were restored to 2.5 million viewers within four days. The BBC provided a mobile mast on an outside broadcast van to restore a restricted BBC2 colour service within two days. The ITA bought a larger temporary mast from a Swedish company. A crew of Polish riggers were hired, and a 669 feet (204 m) mast was erected in under 28 days at a cost of £100,000. This mast could hold only one set of antennae, so many viewers in outlying areas still could not receive colour programmes. The taller mast was brought into service on 16 April. Some weeks later, the BBC erected a 299 feet (91 m) mast, improving coverage.

The accumulation of ice was believed to have caused the collapse, but a committee of inquiry attributed it to a form of oscillation which occurred at a low but steady wind speed. Modifications, including hanging 150 long tons (150 t) of steel chains within each structure, were made to similar masts at Belmont and Winter Hill. None of the modified masts have collapsed.

A section of the collapsed tower was converted for use as a racing control tower at Huddersfield Sailing Club.[7]

New tower edit

After the setting up of temporary masts, erection of the current concrete tower began in 1969. It was not built on the site where the original mast had stood, but slightly to the south-east at 53°36′43″N 1°39′52″W / 53.612056°N 1.664390°W / 53.612056; -1.664390. UHF (625-line colour) transmissions commenced on 21 January 1971, and the older VHF (405-line black and white) system became operational on 21 April 1971. Local residents did not wish to see another mast on Emley Moor, and a departure from usual designs was called for. The new structure consists of a tapered cylindrical pillar, 902 feet (275 m) tall, constructed of reinforced concrete, and is topped by a 180 feet (55 m) steel lattice mast which carries the antennae.

Structure edit

The structure is a tapered, reinforced concrete tower. It is the tallest freestanding structure in the United Kingdom at a height of 1,084 feet (330 m),[1] 66 feet (20 m) taller than The Shard. Reaching the tower room at the top of the concrete structure at 900 feet (274 m) involves a seven-minute journey by lift. The antenna structure above it is a further 184 feet (56 m) tall. The mast's foundations penetrate 20 feet (6 m) into the ground, and the whole structure, including foundations, weighs 11,000 long tons (11,200 t). The tower was designed by Arup. When built, it was the third-tallest freestanding structure in Europe, after the Ostankino Tower at 1,772 feet (540 m), and the Fernsehturm Berlin (current height 1,207 feet (368 m)). The top of the tower is 1,949 feet (594 m) above sea level, due to the site's elevated position on the eastern edge of the Pennines. The tower is not open to the public. There was an observation area off the main road that runs past it, but as of 25 February 2018, this seems to be closed.[8] The tower has a top-floor interior equipment area at a height of 1,083 feet (330 m), which is accessible to people.[9]

 
The tower at night

In 2002, English Heritage granted the tower Grade II listed building protection under UK law, being the lowest and most common of three categories, for meeting its criteria of significant architectural or historic interest.[2][1]

Ownership edit

The tower is currently owned by Arqiva, previously the Independent Broadcasting Authority Engineering section, privatised as NTL Broadcast.

Broadcast details edit

Emley Moor tower broadcasts six digital television multiplexes, three digital radio ensembles, and two independent local radio stations (Capital Yorkshire and Heart Yorkshire), over an area of approximately 3,900 square miles (10,000 km2). It is the main station for 57 relays and repeaters throughout Yorkshire and the surrounding counties. In July 2007, it was confirmed by Ofcom that Emley Moor would remain a B group transmitter after digital switchover (DSO).

The area is important for RF, radio frequency transmission, and from the foot of the structure, both Holme Moss and the Moorside Edge transmitter are visible. They are within a ten mile (16 km) radius, and are located to the southwest and west-northwest, respectively.

Its television coverage area is one of the largest in the UK; covering most of Yorkshire including Leeds, Sheffield and York. Some transmissions can be received in Greater Manchester across the Pennines due to the height of the antenna on the tower and the powerful signal.

Repairs and alterations edit

Over the years, the concrete structure has been updated to reflect the changing nature of communications and technology. At the top and bottom of the tower, supporting structures have been attached to accommodate dishes and aerials.

The BBC reported in July 2006 that for up to two weeks, it would broadcast analogue and digital signals at a lower power than usual, or shut down between 09:00 and 15:00 BST on weekdays from late July until 4 August, to allow aircraft warning lights to be fitted and repairs carried out. Repairs were estimated to affect around five million homes; however, a spokesperson for National Grid Wireless announced that the work had been scheduled around major events.[10]

Digital UK reported in April 2010 that the transmitter would undergo work in preparation for the digital switchover (DSO) in 2011. Disruption to some or all Freeview services was expected to last for around two months, during which time a reserve transmitter would continue to broadcast the five main analogue channels.[11] The work was then reported to be continuing into September due to "poor weather conditions and complex engineering issues".

In March 2018, a temporary 1,063 ft (324 m) mast was erected so that work could be undertaken on the main tower's transmitting arrays without interrupting transmissions,[12]. The temporary mast was due to be removed by the end of 2021. However, it was not until summer 2023 that work got underway to dismantle it, carried out by Turmbau Steffens & Nölle GmbH of Berlin.[13]

Channels listed by frequency edit

 
Emley Moor's distinctive tapering form on the moorland

Analogue radio (FM) edit

frequency kW[14] service
105.1 MHz 2.55 Capital Yorkshire
106.2 MHz 2.35 Heart Yorkshire

Digital radio (DAB) edit

frequency block kW[14] operator
216.928 MHz 11A 10 Sound Digital
222.064 MHz 11D 8.5 Digital One
225.648 MHz 12B 10 BBC National DAB
229.072 MHz 12D 5 Leeds

Analogue television edit

At Emley Moor, BBC Two analogue closed on 7 September 2011, and ITV Yorkshire temporarily moved onto its frequency at the time to allow the BBC A MUX to launch in its place. The remaining four analogue services closed on 21 September 2011, when the remaining digital multiplexes were allowed to transmit with increased power.

frequency UHF kW service
599.25 MHz 37 870 Channel 5
631.25 MHz 41 870 Channel 4
655.25 MHz 44 870 BBC One
679.25 MHz 47 870 Yorkshire
711.25 MHz 51 870 BBC Two

Relays edit

Below is a list of transmitters that relay Emley Moor.

Digital television edit

transmitter kW BBC-A BBC-B D3&4 SDN ARQ-A ARQ-B Local Pol. A.G.
Addingham 0.005 43 46 40 V B K
Armitage Bridge 0.002 32 35 34 V A K
Batley 0.003 32 35 34 V A K
Beecroft Hill 0.2 37 45 42 39 V B K
Blackburn in Rotherham 0.002 40 46 43 V B K
Bradford West 0.003 39 45 42 V B K
Brockwell 0.002 45 39 42 V B K
Calver Peak 0.05 45 39 42 V B K
Chesterfield 0.4[r 1] 31 29 37 43 46 40 V K
Cleckheaton 0.002 29 37 31 V A K
Conisbrough 0.002 40 46 43 V B K
Cop Hill 0.2 25 28 22 V A K
Copley 0.002 29 37 31 V A K
Cornholme 0.008 32 35 34 V A K
Cowling 0.003 42 49 45 V B K
Cragg Vale 0.005 32 35 34 V A K
Cullingworth 0.003 39 45 42 V B K
Dronfield 0.002 39 45 42 V B K
Edale 0.002 40 46 43 V B K
Elland 0.002 32 35 34 V B K
Grassington 0.012 23 26 30 V A K
Hagg Wood 0.007 39 45 42 V B K
Halifax 0.1 24 27 21+ V A K
Hasland 0.002 32 35 34 V A K
Headingley 0.002 32 35 34 V A K
Hebden Bridge 0.05 25 28 22 V A K
Heyshaw 0.1 39 45 42 V B K
Holmfield 0.004 29 37 31 V A K
Holmfirth 0.005 32 35 34 V A K
Hope 0.002 28 25 22 V A K
Idle 0.05 23 30 26 32 35 34 V A K
Keighley 2 40 46 43 29 31 37 V K
Keighley Town 0.002 23 29 26 V A K
Kettlewell 0.026 42 39 45 V B K
Longwood Edge 0.008 29 37 31 H A K
Luddenden 0.012 40 46 43 V B K
Lydgate 0.002 21 27 24 V A K
Millhouse Green 0.002 32 35 34 V A K
Oughtibridge 0.008 23 30 26 V A K
Oxenhope 0.04 25 28 22 V A K
Primrose Hill 0.006 40 46 43 V B K
Ripponden 0.012 32 35 34 V A K
Shatton Edge 0.2 32 35 34 V A K
Sheffield 1[r 2] 27 21+ 24 42 45 39 35 V K
Skipton 2 49 42 45 V B E
Skipton Town 0.003 24 21+ 27 V A K
Stocksbridge 0.002 40 46 43 V B K
Sutton-in-Craven 0.002 23 30 26 V A K
Tideswell Moor 0.05 40 46 43 V B K
Todmorden 0.1 39 42 45 V B K
Totley Rise 0.016 33 48 36 V A K
Walsden 0.01 40 46 43 V B K
Walsden South 0.002 32 35 34 V A K
Wharfedale 0.4 25 28 22 V A K
Wheatley 0.3 32 35 34 V A K
Wincobank 0.002 29 37 31 V A K
  1. ^ Apart from BBC A, BBC B and Digital 3&4 which transmits at 800 W.
  2. ^ Apart from Local Multiplex which transmits at 400 W.

Other structures of comparable height edit

Taller structures
Smaller structures

See also edit

References edit

References
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Emley Moor Mast". Huddersfield Daily Examiner. Huddersfield: Reach plc. Retrieved 3 April 2017.
  2. ^ a b . Ofcom.org.uk. Ofcom. Archived from the original on 1 August 2011.
  3. ^ "Diagrams". Skyscraperpage.com. Retrieved 10 July 2021.
  4. ^ "TheBigTower Craigkelly Transmitter". Thebigtower.com. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
  5. ^ The Times, Friday 10 September 1965, p. 9
  6. ^ "Photographic image" (JPG). Tx.mb21.co.uk. Retrieved 6 September 2023.
  7. ^ Senior, Steve. "The fall and rise of Emley Moor - Emley Moor Mk2 lives!". Tx.mb21.co.uk. Retrieved 3 April 2017.
  8. ^ "Emley Moor transmitting station". TripAdvisor. Retrieved 18 September 2018.
  9. ^ "Dewsbury mum-of-two wins trip up Emley Moor mast after being named unsung hero". Huddersfield Daily Examiner. Huddersfield: Reach plc. 19 July 2014. Retrieved 3 April 2017.
  10. ^ "Transmitter work affects millions". BBC News. 25 July 2006. Retrieved 3 April 2017.
  11. ^ "I receive my TV signal from the Emley Moor transmitter - why are my TV services experiencing interruptions?". help.DigitalUK.co.uk. Digital UK. 29 April 2010. Retrieved 11 May 2010.[dead link]
  12. ^ Himelfield, Dave (12 April 2019). "Where work on Emley Moor Mast and the second temporary mast is up to". Huddersfield Daily Examiner. Huddersfield: Reach plc. Retrieved 19 April 2019.
  13. ^ "GoggleboxTech.UK". Goggleboxtech.uk. Retrieved 6 September 2023.
  14. ^ a b Radio Listeners Guide 2010
  • Bartak, A. J. J. (February 1972). "The new tower for the Independent Television Authority at Emley Moor, Yorkshire". The Structural Engineer. Institution of Structural Engineers. 50 (2): 67–80.
Notes
  1. ^ It lies in OS grid square SE221899

External links edit

  • The Transmission Gallery: photographs, coverage maps and information
  • Info and pictures of Emley Moor transmitter including historical power/frequency changes and present co-receivable transmitters
  • Emley Moor Tower (1970) at Structurae.
  • Diagrams - SkyscraperPage.com
  • BBC Bradford and West Yorkshire - Emley Moor: Inside and Out!
  • Emley Moor transmitter at TheBigTower.com
  • A Flickr page of pictures from the inside of the tower

emley, moor, transmitting, station, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Emley Moor transmitting station news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Emley Moor transmitting station 1 is a telecommunications and broadcasting facility on Emley Moor 1 1 mile 1 6 km west of the village centre of Emley n 1 in Huddersfield West Yorkshire England Arqiva Emley Moor TowerEmley Moor transmitting station West Yorkshire Tower height319 m 1 047 ft Coordinates53 36 43 N 1 39 52 W 53 611944 N 1 664444 W 53 611944 1 664444Grid referenceSE222128Built1969 1971BBC regionBBC YorkshireITV regionITV YorkshireLocal TV serviceLocal TV Leeds That s YorkIt is made up of a 1 047 ft 319 m 1 concrete tower and apparatus that began to transmit in 1971 It is protected under UK law as a Grade II listed building It is the tallest freestanding structure in the United Kingdom 1 2 and 25th tallest tower in the world 1 It was the seventh tallest freestanding structure and was fourth tallest tower in the European Union before Brexit 1 When built it was the sixth tallest freestanding structure in the world after the Ostankino Tower the Empire State Building 875 North Michigan Avenue known as The John Hancock Center the Berliner Fernsehturm and Tokyo Tower 3 The tower s current official name The Arqiva Tower is shown on a sign beside the offices at the base of the tower but it is commonly known just as Emley Moor Mast 1 In 2021 the antenna was removed due to technical errors and it was replaced by a shorter antenna of 11 m 36 ft but the structure still remains the tallest freestanding structure in the United Kingdom Contents 1 History 1 1 Second mast and collapse 1 2 New tower 2 Structure 3 Ownership 4 Broadcast details 5 Repairs and alterations 6 Channels listed by frequency 6 1 Analogue radio FM 6 2 Digital radio DAB 6 3 Digital television DVB T DVB T2 6 3 1 Before switchover 6 4 Analogue television 7 Relays 7 1 Digital television 8 Other structures of comparable height 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory editEmley Moor has been a transmission site since the earliest days of commercial television in the UK The present concrete tower is the third antenna support structure to have occupied the site The first permanent transmitter built there was for ITV covering much of the north of England It had a 443 feet 135 m lattice tower which provided limited coverage This original 443 foot 135 m lattice tower was erected in 1956 to provide Independent Television broadcasts to the Yorkshire area It entered service on 3 November 1956 transmitting Granada Television programmes on weekdays and ABC TV programmes at weekends Second mast and collapse edit In 1964 in anticipation of colour PAL transmissions set to begin in 1966 the original 443 foot 135 m lattice tower was replaced by a taller 1 265 foot 385 5 m guyed mast identical to the structure at Belmont transmitting station in Lincolnshire at 53 36 46 N 1 39 58 W 53 612700 N 1 666078 W 53 612700 1 666078 see map on mb21 The Transmission Gallery The dismantled lattice tower was rebuilt at Craigkelly transmitting station 4 Yorkshire Television commenced broadcasting from the Emley Moor transmitter following the reorganisation of the ITV franchises on 29 July 1968 The guy supported tubular mast was constructed from curved steel segments to form a 9 feet 2 75 m diameter tube 902 feet 275 m long and was surmounted by a lattice section 351 feet 107 m tall and a capping cylinder bringing the total height to 1 265 feet 385 5 m At the time of its construction it was one of the tallest human made structures in the world It was designed by British Insulated Callender s Cables BICC and manufactured by EMI and built by J L Eve Construction Its ropes weighed 85 long tons 86 t made by British Ropes with steel from Steel Peech and Tozer of Templeborough in South Yorkshire The column weighed 210 long tons 210 t and had 375 segments with steel from United Steel Companies at Scunthorpe in northern Lincolnshire 5 The cylindrical steel mast was regularly coated in ice during the winter and large icicles formed on the guy wires placing them under great strain During winter ice often fell from the guy wires For this reason red warning lights on the tower operated when ice was a hazard and notices were posted on the fence adjacent to Jagger Lane below the guy wire crossings On 19 March 1969 a combination of strong winds and the weight of ice that had formed around the top of the mast and on the guy wires caused the structure to collapse The duty engineer wrote the following in the station s log book demonstrating that failure of the structure was completely unexpected Day shift Lee Caffell Vander Byl surnames Ice hazard Packed ice beginning to fall from mast amp stays Roads close to station temporarily closed by Councils Please notify councils when roads are safe Pye monitor no frame lock V10 replaced low ins Monitor overheating due to fan choked up with dust cleaned out motor lubricated and fan blades reset Evening shift Glendenning Bottom Redgrove surnames 1 265 ft 386 m Mast Fell down across Jagger Lane corner of Common Lane at 17 01 45 Police I T A HQ R O etc all notified Mast Power Isolator Fuses removed amp isolator locked in the OFF position All isolators in basement feeding mast stump also switched off Dehydrators amp TXs switched off nbsp Wreckage of the Emley Moor Mast which collapsed in March 1969 strewn across fields The collapse left sections of twisted mast strewn over the transmitter site and across the junction of Common Lane and Jagger Lane and the surrounding fields Although a falling stay cable cut through the roof of a local church 6 and across the transmitter site buildings no one was injured It completely disabled the BBC2 UHF transmitter and the ITV VHF transmitter leaving several million people without service BBC1 VHF television transmissions continued from Holme Moss The Independent Television Authority ITA owned a collapsible emergency mast 200 feet 61 m tall which was moved to Emley from the Lichfield transmitting station so that some service could be restored ITV signals were restored to 2 5 million viewers within four days The BBC provided a mobile mast on an outside broadcast van to restore a restricted BBC2 colour service within two days The ITA bought a larger temporary mast from a Swedish company A crew of Polish riggers were hired and a 669 feet 204 m mast was erected in under 28 days at a cost of 100 000 This mast could hold only one set of antennae so many viewers in outlying areas still could not receive colour programmes The taller mast was brought into service on 16 April Some weeks later the BBC erected a 299 feet 91 m mast improving coverage The accumulation of ice was believed to have caused the collapse but a committee of inquiry attributed it to a form of oscillation which occurred at a low but steady wind speed Modifications including hanging 150 long tons 150 t of steel chains within each structure were made to similar masts at Belmont and Winter Hill None of the modified masts have collapsed A section of the collapsed tower was converted for use as a racing control tower at Huddersfield Sailing Club 7 New tower edit After the setting up of temporary masts erection of the current concrete tower began in 1969 It was not built on the site where the original mast had stood but slightly to the south east at 53 36 43 N 1 39 52 W 53 612056 N 1 664390 W 53 612056 1 664390 UHF 625 line colour transmissions commenced on 21 January 1971 and the older VHF 405 line black and white system became operational on 21 April 1971 Local residents did not wish to see another mast on Emley Moor and a departure from usual designs was called for The new structure consists of a tapered cylindrical pillar 902 feet 275 m tall constructed of reinforced concrete and is topped by a 180 feet 55 m steel lattice mast which carries the antennae Structure editThe structure is a tapered reinforced concrete tower It is the tallest freestanding structure in the United Kingdom at a height of 1 084 feet 330 m 1 66 feet 20 m taller than The Shard Reaching the tower room at the top of the concrete structure at 900 feet 274 m involves a seven minute journey by lift The antenna structure above it is a further 184 feet 56 m tall The mast s foundations penetrate 20 feet 6 m into the ground and the whole structure including foundations weighs 11 000 long tons 11 200 t The tower was designed by Arup When built it was the third tallest freestanding structure in Europe after the Ostankino Tower at 1 772 feet 540 m and the Fernsehturm Berlin current height 1 207 feet 368 m The top of the tower is 1 949 feet 594 m above sea level due to the site s elevated position on the eastern edge of the Pennines The tower is not open to the public There was an observation area off the main road that runs past it but as of 25 February 2018 this seems to be closed 8 The tower has a top floor interior equipment area at a height of 1 083 feet 330 m which is accessible to people 9 nbsp The tower at nightIn 2002 English Heritage granted the tower Grade II listed building protection under UK law being the lowest and most common of three categories for meeting its criteria of significant architectural or historic interest 2 1 Ownership editThe tower is currently owned by Arqiva previously the Independent Broadcasting Authority Engineering section privatised as NTL Broadcast Broadcast details editEmley Moor tower broadcasts six digital television multiplexes three digital radio ensembles and two independent local radio stations Capital Yorkshire and Heart Yorkshire over an area of approximately 3 900 square miles 10 000 km2 It is the main station for 57 relays and repeaters throughout Yorkshire and the surrounding counties In July 2007 it was confirmed by Ofcom that Emley Moor would remain a B group transmitter after digital switchover DSO The area is important for RF radio frequency transmission and from the foot of the structure both Holme Moss and the Moorside Edge transmitter are visible They are within a ten mile 16 km radius and are located to the southwest and west northwest respectively Its television coverage area is one of the largest in the UK covering most of Yorkshire including Leeds Sheffield and York Some transmissions can be received in Greater Manchester across the Pennines due to the height of the antenna on the tower and the powerful signal Repairs and alterations editOver the years the concrete structure has been updated to reflect the changing nature of communications and technology At the top and bottom of the tower supporting structures have been attached to accommodate dishes and aerials The BBC reported in July 2006 that for up to two weeks it would broadcast analogue and digital signals at a lower power than usual or shut down between 09 00 and 15 00 BST on weekdays from late July until 4 August to allow aircraft warning lights to be fitted and repairs carried out Repairs were estimated to affect around five million homes however a spokesperson for National Grid Wireless announced that the work had been scheduled around major events 10 Digital UK reported in April 2010 that the transmitter would undergo work in preparation for the digital switchover DSO in 2011 Disruption to some or all Freeview services was expected to last for around two months during which time a reserve transmitter would continue to broadcast the five main analogue channels 11 The work was then reported to be continuing into September due to poor weather conditions and complex engineering issues In March 2018 a temporary 1 063 ft 324 m mast was erected so that work could be undertaken on the main tower s transmitting arrays without interrupting transmissions 12 The temporary mast was due to be removed by the end of 2021 However it was not until summer 2023 that work got underway to dismantle it carried out by Turmbau Steffens amp Nolle GmbH of Berlin 13 Channels listed by frequency edit nbsp Emley Moor s distinctive tapering form on the moorlandAnalogue radio FM edit frequency kW 14 service105 1 MHz 2 55 Capital Yorkshire106 2 MHz 2 35 Heart YorkshireDigital radio DAB edit frequency block kW 14 operator216 928 MHz 11A 10 Sound Digital222 064 MHz 11D 8 5 Digital One225 648 MHz 12B 10 BBC National DAB229 072 MHz 12D 5 LeedsDigital television DVB T DVB T2 edit frequency UHF kW operator system570 000 MHz 33 174 COM4 SDN DVB T594 000 MHz 36 174 COM5 ARQ A DVB T618 000 MHz 39 5 LTVmux DVB T634 000 MHz 41 174 PSB3 BBC B DVB T2658 000 MHz 44 174 PSB2 D3 amp 4 DVB T682 000 MHz 47 174 PSB1 BBC A DVB T690 000 MHz 48 174 COM6 ARQ B DVB T Before switchover edit frequency UHF kW operator system618 000 MHz 39 4 BBC B Mux HD DVB T2625 833 MHz 40 10 Digital 3 amp 4 Mux 2 DVB T649 833 MHz 43 5 SDN Mux A DVB T673 833 MHz 46 10 BBC Mux B DVB T697 833 MHz 49 4 Arqiva Mux D DVB T705 833 MHz 50 10 Arqiva Mux C DVB T722 166 MHz 52 10 BBC Mux 1 DVB T Analogue television edit At Emley Moor BBC Two analogue closed on 7 September 2011 and ITV Yorkshire temporarily moved onto its frequency at the time to allow the BBC A MUX to launch in its place The remaining four analogue services closed on 21 September 2011 when the remaining digital multiplexes were allowed to transmit with increased power frequency UHF kW service599 25 MHz 37 870 Channel 5631 25 MHz 41 870 Channel 4655 25 MHz 44 870 BBC One679 25 MHz 47 870 Yorkshire711 25 MHz 51 870 BBC TwoRelays editBelow is a list of transmitters that relay Emley Moor Digital television edit transmitter kW BBC A BBC B D3 amp 4 SDN ARQ A ARQ B Local Pol A G Addingham 0 005 43 46 40 V B KArmitage Bridge 0 002 32 35 34 V A KBatley 0 003 32 35 34 V A KBeecroft Hill 0 2 37 45 42 39 V B KBlackburn in Rotherham 0 002 40 46 43 V B KBradford West 0 003 39 45 42 V B KBrockwell 0 002 45 39 42 V B KCalver Peak 0 05 45 39 42 V B KChesterfield 0 4 r 1 31 29 37 43 46 40 V KCleckheaton 0 002 29 37 31 V A KConisbrough 0 002 40 46 43 V B KCop Hill 0 2 25 28 22 V A KCopley 0 002 29 37 31 V A KCornholme 0 008 32 35 34 V A KCowling 0 003 42 49 45 V B KCragg Vale 0 005 32 35 34 V A KCullingworth 0 003 39 45 42 V B KDronfield 0 002 39 45 42 V B KEdale 0 002 40 46 43 V B KElland 0 002 32 35 34 V B KGrassington 0 012 23 26 30 V A KHagg Wood 0 007 39 45 42 V B KHalifax 0 1 24 27 21 V A KHasland 0 002 32 35 34 V A KHeadingley 0 002 32 35 34 V A KHebden Bridge 0 05 25 28 22 V A KHeyshaw 0 1 39 45 42 V B KHolmfield 0 004 29 37 31 V A KHolmfirth 0 005 32 35 34 V A KHope 0 002 28 25 22 V A KIdle 0 05 23 30 26 32 35 34 V A KKeighley 2 40 46 43 29 31 37 V KKeighley Town 0 002 23 29 26 V A KKettlewell 0 026 42 39 45 V B KLongwood Edge 0 008 29 37 31 H A KLuddenden 0 012 40 46 43 V B KLydgate 0 002 21 27 24 V A KMillhouse Green 0 002 32 35 34 V A KOughtibridge 0 008 23 30 26 V A KOxenhope 0 04 25 28 22 V A KPrimrose Hill 0 006 40 46 43 V B KRipponden 0 012 32 35 34 V A KShatton Edge 0 2 32 35 34 V A KSheffield 1 r 2 27 21 24 42 45 39 35 V KSkipton 2 49 42 45 V B ESkipton Town 0 003 24 21 27 V A KStocksbridge 0 002 40 46 43 V B KSutton in Craven 0 002 23 30 26 V A KTideswell Moor 0 05 40 46 43 V B KTodmorden 0 1 39 42 45 V B KTotley Rise 0 016 33 48 36 V A KWalsden 0 01 40 46 43 V B KWalsden South 0 002 32 35 34 V A KWharfedale 0 4 25 28 22 V A KWheatley 0 3 32 35 34 V A KWincobank 0 002 29 37 31 V A K Apart from BBC A BBC B and Digital 3 amp 4 which transmits at 800 W Apart from Local Multiplex which transmits at 400 W Other structures of comparable height editTaller structuresIt is shorter than Skelton transmitting station in Cumbria a guyed mast which at 1 198 feet 365 m is the highest structure of any kind in the UK Skelton is comparable to the Gerbrandy Tower partially guyed between IJsselstein and Lopik in the Netherlands at 1 204 feet 366 9 m Torreta de Guardamar guyed in Spain at 1 214 feet 370 m The Ostankino Tower in Moscow is the tallest freestanding structure in Europe at 1 772 feet 540 m The Kyiv TV Tower is the next tallest freestanding structure in Europe at 1 263 feet 385 m The Riga radio and TV tower follows at 1 209 feet 368 5 m Smaller structuresIt is 66 feet 20 m taller than The Shard in London which is the next tallest free standing structure in the United Kingdom It is 135 feet 41 m taller than 22 Bishopsgate in London Britain s second tallest building It is 312 feet 95 m taller than One Canada Square by Canary Wharf London Britain s third tallest building Sint Pieters Leeuw Tower in Belgium is 991 feet 302 m The Eiffel Tower in Paris France is 984 feet 300 m plus a 79 foot 24 m antenna See also edit nbsp Radio portal nbsp Television portal nbsp Architecture portal nbsp Yorkshire portalTelecommunications in the United Kingdom List of radio stations in the United Kingdom List of tallest buildings and structures in Great Britain Radio masts and towers List of catastrophic collapses of radio masts and towers List of towers List of masts List of tallest freestanding structures in the world Listed buildings in Denby DaleReferences editReferences a b c d e f g h i Emley Moor Mast Huddersfield Daily Examiner Huddersfield Reach plc Retrieved 3 April 2017 a b How TV transmitters transformed and towered over the UK Ofcom org uk Ofcom Archived from the original on 1 August 2011 Diagrams Skyscraperpage com Retrieved 10 July 2021 TheBigTower Craigkelly Transmitter Thebigtower com Retrieved 2 August 2020 The Times Friday 10 September 1965 p 9 Photographic image JPG Tx mb21 co uk Retrieved 6 September 2023 Senior Steve The fall and rise of Emley Moor Emley Moor Mk2 lives Tx mb21 co uk Retrieved 3 April 2017 Emley Moor transmitting station TripAdvisor Retrieved 18 September 2018 Dewsbury mum of two wins trip up Emley Moor mast after being named unsung hero Huddersfield Daily Examiner Huddersfield Reach plc 19 July 2014 Retrieved 3 April 2017 Transmitter work affects millions BBC News 25 July 2006 Retrieved 3 April 2017 I receive my TV signal from the Emley Moor transmitter why are my TV services experiencing interruptions help DigitalUK co uk Digital UK 29 April 2010 Retrieved 11 May 2010 dead link Himelfield Dave 12 April 2019 Where work on Emley Moor Mast and the second temporary mast is up to Huddersfield Daily Examiner Huddersfield Reach plc Retrieved 19 April 2019 GoggleboxTech UK Goggleboxtech uk Retrieved 6 September 2023 a b Radio Listeners Guide 2010 Bartak A J J February 1972 The new tower for the Independent Television Authority at Emley Moor Yorkshire The Structural Engineer Institution of Structural Engineers 50 2 67 80 Notes It lies in OS grid square SE221899External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Emley Moor Tower The Transmission Gallery photographs coverage maps and information Info and pictures of Emley Moor transmitter including historical power frequency changes and present co receivable transmitters Emley Moor Tower 1970 at Structurae Diagrams SkyscraperPage com BBC Bradford and West Yorkshire Emley Moor Inside and Out Emley Moor transmitter at TheBigTower com A Flickr page of pictures from the inside of the tower Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Emley Moor transmitting station amp oldid 1186478095, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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