Heaton Park BT Tower

Heaton Park

Heaton Park BT Tower (left)
Location Heaton Park, Manchester
Coordinates 53°32′23″N 2°15′19″W / 53.5396°N 2.2552°W / 53.5396; -2.2552Coordinates: 53°32′23″N 2°15′19″W / 53.5396°N 2.2552°W / 53.5396; -2.2552
Grid reference SD8308804828
Built 1960s

Heaton Park BT Tower is a 72.54 metres ( 238 ft) tall telecommunication tower built of reinforced concrete close to the banks of Heaton Park Reservoir, at Heaton Park, Manchester, England. Heaton Park BT Tower is one of the few British towers built of reinforced concrete, and one of seven BT towers of the 'Chilterns' design.

Heaton Park is notable because it provided a large portion of the trunk comms capacity into Manchester and there is quite a lot of primary and secondary source written history about the architecture of these 'Chilterns' type concrete towers, which are all significant local landmarks and cultural icons.

During the Cold War, the UK government proposed a communications network that (it was hoped) would survive a nuclear attack. Radio stations (including the Heaton Park Tower) would maintain national and international communications before, during and after a nuclear emergency, transmitting microwave radio signals in a network known as Backbone. Spurs feeding into the network were provided at three location; London (BT Tower) , Manchester (Heaton Park Tower) and Birmingham (BT Tower (Birmingham)).[1] Whether the plan for the Backbone network was realized is information protected by the Official Secrets Act 1911[2] but, during the planning process, HM Government denied in Parliament that there was anything secretive about the tower or its function.[3]

Beside the tower was a monitoring station (one of hundreds across the country) to record the blast and fallout in the event of a nuclear war. The station provided for three men from the Royal Observer Corps (ROC) to live underground whilst recording what was happening above ground in the event of a nuclear strike.[4]

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References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/29/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.