How old is the post office tower
In , Rani Chandra believed that the strange lights that had been seen around the BT Tower were not lightning bolts, as reported in the Ealing Echo , but an alien spacecraft. Tardis Explore. Main episode list Classmates. Main episode list K9 and Company. Other media. Real people. Explore Wikis Community Central.
Register Don't have an account? Other sources of revenue, i. There was a great deal of emphasis on futurism — television was rapidly developing, the range of automated products was expanding. The Telstar communication satellites had been launched, Yuri Gagarin had made the first manned space flight, the Space Age was upon us. The public were shocked when, on October 31 , a bomb exploded in the Post Office tower, which caused extensive damage but no injuries.
The restaurant was closed to the public for security reasons in , and public access to the building ceased in The building, which is now Grade II listed, is still in use, and is the site of a major UK communications hub.
In the age of the Shard, it's easy to be blase about the Post Office Tower, which has been overtaken by numerous skyscrapers. However, it still has a place in the affections of many Londoners and Britons in general.
And we shouldn't forget how, in the mid to late Sixties, this thin cylinder of glass, steel and concrete symbolised a new mood in Britain - a new spirit of modernisation, a great feeling of enthusiasm and optimism attached to new technology — and it's that dynamism and optimism, and confident sense of style that I find very appealing.
Tags: Communications , Harold Wilson , Technology. This blog gives insights into the history of government — its development, its departments and some of the roles and people involved. Find out more.
Opening ceremony The Tower was operationally opened on 8 October by Prime Minister Harold Wilson, who tested the new equipment by making an inaugural phone call to the Lord Mayor of Birmingham. Commercial success The Tower was opened to the public on 19 May and was an immediate success.
Keep tabs on the past. Sign up for our email alerts. Members have given examples of seemingly trivial information that remains officially secret.
An example that has not been mentioned, but which is so trivial that it is worth mentioning, is the absence of the British Telecom tower from Ordnance Survey maps. I hope that I am covered by parliamentary privilege when I reveal that the British Telecom tower does exist and that its address is 60 Cleveland Street, London.
BT Tower was originally meant to be much shorter, but had to be extended so it could broadcast signals over the Chiltern Hills that form the north rim of the London basin. Many of the original microwave aerials have been removed as digital telecommunications has replaced microwave transmissions. At least 31 of the 57 original aerials have been removed from the building. Because the building is Grade II listed, for the longest time many of the antennas could not be removed without permission, but due to safety concerns, many were finally removed.
Keeping up with the digital age, BT Tower houses a Mediahive digital content management system with a storage capacity of 3. The lifts installed in can go from the bottom floor to the top in 20 seconds. Able to ascend at 7 metres per second, they are amongst the fastest in Europe.
The 34th Floor was built to incorporate a revolving restaurant that could complete a full rotation every It was run by Billy Butlin and known as The Top of The Tower and ran on nylon bearings and rollers with a two brake horsepower motor. In , it was the target of an IRA bomb placed in the mens toilets, but the restaurant remained open until when the lease expired amongst security concerns.
The restaurant area is now utilised for corporate events. It is occasionally open to the public during London Open House Weekend, but it was not in
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