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Radio City Tower

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Radio City Tower
Radio City Tower, viewed from Lime Street in June 2021.
Map
Alternative namesSt John's Beacon
St John's Tower
General information
StatusOpen
TypeRadio station
LocationLiverpool, England, United Kingdom
Address1 Houghton Street
Liverpool
L1 1RL
CountryEngland
Coordinates53°24′23″N 2°58′55″W / 53.40639°N 2.98194°W / 53.40639; -2.98194
Current tenantsBauer Media Audio UK
Construction started1966
Completed1969
Opened1971
Renovated1999-2000
Cost£5 million (refurbishment)
OwnerRivingtonHark
AnaCap
Height
Roof138 m (453 ft)
Technical details
Floor count5
Lifts/elevators2
Design and construction
Architect(s)James A. Roberts Associates - Birmingham
Structural engineerScott Wilson Kirkpatrick
Other information
ParkingSt John's Shopping Centre
Website
stjohnsbeacon.co.uk
References
[1]

Radio City Tower (also known as St. John's Beacon) is a radio and observation tower in Liverpool, England. Designed by James A. Roberts Associates, it was built in 1969 and opened by Queen Elizabeth II.

The tower is 138 metres (453 ft) tall,[1] and is the second-tallest free-standing structure in Liverpool. When considering the height of the tower, it has a 10 m (33 ft) long antenna on the roof, making it the tallest structure in Liverpool (including antennas).

As testament to the importance of its design, which was described by Historic England as "embodying the technological bravura and spirit of the space age", the building was listed at Grade II in November 2020.[2]

The tower takes its name from the local commercial radio station, Radio City, that has operated from the building since 2000. Its sister station, Greatest Hits Radio also broadcasts from the building.[3]

In January 2024, Bauer Media announced that Radio City would be rebranded to Hits Radio Liverpool from April. Programmes broadcast from the tower will be unaffected. It is currently not known what will happen to the external signage on the tower.[4]

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Transcription

St. John's Beacon (1969–1999)

At the top of the tower was a luxury 5 star revolving restaurant, the façade and floor of the restaurant revolving as one unit, while the roof was used as an observation platform for visitors. There are 558 stairs up to the top, and two lift shafts with lifts reaching the top in 30 seconds.

The tower is structurally independent of the adjacent shopping centre, with a simple foundation onto sandstone. The foundation is 18 metres (60 ft) in diameter, 5.2 m (17 ft) deep and begins 12 m (40 ft) below Houghton Street. It has a tapering shaft that was built using slip-formed concrete. The crow's nest structure at the top was then added after the shaft was formed.

The original restaurant closed in 1979 for health and safety issues.[5] It was re-opened, with a reduced capacity and additional fire prevention measures, during the early 1980s. The restaurant was eventually re-fitted as a Buck Rogers space-themed restaurant in 1983, but closed again due to lack of business.[5] After this the observation deck and the restaurant remained closed.

In the following years, the tower lay empty and derelict. Often considered to be an eyesore or a White elephant by fellow Liverpudlians, blue "UFO style" neon strip lights were added to the perimeter of the tower in 1994 in an attempt to increase its attractiveness. These were later removed upon the refurbishment of the tower.

In late 1998, Radio City, owned and operated by the then Emap Radio, expressed interest in refurbishing the tower to house Radio City and Magic 1548, including their studios and required office space. The plan was announced to the public and in the interim period, Radio City would regularly broadcast from the beacon and also broadcast during the Lightshow Festival period in late 1999 which involved many different patterned and coloured lights being shone from the tower.

Work commenced in 1999 and was completed in the summer of 2000.

Radio City Tower (1999–present)

The tower was refurbished in 1999 at a cost of £5 million. It reopened as Radio City 96.7 (and Magic 1548) in August 2000. The outdoor observation deck, which had been located on the roof of the restaurant, was transformed into a second floor. It now holds offices and conference rooms, for both radio stations. The studios are on the lower floor, which was previously the restaurant. The original revolving structure and machinery were left intact during the refurbishment. Brackets were added to lock the moving structure in place.

The tower has been known to sway in heavy winds. This is a design feature and common in construction within skyscrapers and tall buildings in order to prevent the building snapping at its base or cracking along the shaft.

During the refurbishment between the 1st and 2nd floors, the Radio City 96.7 lettering was added. It is illuminated in yellow at night. Several other lights were added onto the base of the crow's nest structure, which is illuminated all day and periodically change colour. During Christmas, a beam of light is fired onto the base of the tower, with a Christmas themed image displayed. The 2nd floor windows are illuminated at night, sometimes with a particular colour to mark certain events. A red aircraft warning beacon sits on top of the tower's main structure.

The refurbishment added an advertising framework at the top of the tower, designed for both a fabric banner and illuminated light boxes.

Window cleaning and light bulb changes are performed by specialist teams, who abseil down the side of the tower.

The roof houses the local 10C Digital Audio Broadcasting multiplex for Liverpool. Radio City and Greatest Hits Radio North West do not directly broadcast from the roof. Their FM signal is transmitted by the Allerton Park Transmitter, along with BBC Radio Merseyside on 95.8FM.

In 2017, the Liverpool-based tech startup Scan and Make organised the first edition of the art contest exhibition "Making Art 4.0" in the Radio offices.

In 2018, an artwork banner was displayed on the beacon's advertisement framework. It was titled Liverpool 2018, celebrating 10 years since the city's 2008 European Capital Of Culture events.

Radio City Talk ceased broadcasting on 31 May 2020, after it was deemed not financially viable due to low listening figures.

As of September 2020, the tower houses the studios for the local programming of Radio City and national programming for Greatest Hits Radio.

St John's Beacon viewing gallery

St John's Beacon viewing gallery logo

In 2010, the Radio City Tower's (St John's Beacon) first floor was opened full-time to members of the public on paying an entrance fee. As of 2023, this fee is £7.50 for adults and £5.50 for children.[6] Visitors can spend as long as they wish in the tower. The gallery gives the opportunity to view Liverpool from a 360° panoramic view 138 m (452 ft) above Houghton Street.[7]

Radio stations

Initially, Radio City and Magic 1548 began broadcasting from the tower. However, the tower was actually refurbished with five studios and a small recording and news studio.

In 2008, the then City Talk 105.9 started broadcasting from the tower.

In 2015, with the revamp of local stations and the creation of Bauer City 1, Bauer City 2 and Bauer City 3, Magic 1548 became Radio City 2 and City Talk 105.9 became Radio City Talk and swapped frequencies with Radio City 2. A new station, Radio City 3 launched on 19 January 2015. This station did not need a dedicated studio as all output came from The Hits in Manchester but retained local advertisements. It was later dropped from the lineup in 2017 and eventually, The Hits became Hits Radio UK in 2018.

In January 2019, Bauer launched Greatest Hits Radio across the UK with Bauer City 2 stations becoming local outputs. Radio City 2 was rebranded as Greatest Hits Radio Liverpool & The North West. The national weekday breakfast show, as well as local news for Liverpool originates from the tower.

Radio City Talk ceased broadcasting on 31 May 2020 due to low listening figures.

In September 2020 with changes to Greatest Hits Radio across the UK, Greatest Hits Radio Liverpool and The North West merged with several other stations across the north west.

Radio City and Rock FM broadcast a shared weekday breakfast show across the North West. This originates from Radio City's studio.[8]

Failed zip wire proposal

In late June 2020, a proposal was put up by ZipWorldUK for a new permanent £5 million zip wire that would start from the second floor of the Beacon and end in Liverpool's Central Library. The project attracted mixed public opinions, with many people claiming that it would be a permanent defacing of one of the city's world famous landmarks.[citation needed] Others expressed concerns that the noise of the zip wire could disturb library users.[citation needed] The plan went before Liverpool City Council and on 30 June 2020 the plans were approved,[9] however, on 2 September 2020 it was reported that Liverpool Mayor Joe Anderson was withdrawing permission for this use of the Central Library, effectively vetoing the proposal.[10]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "St John's Beacon (Radio City Tower), non Civil Parish - 1471669 | Historic England".
  2. ^ "St John's Beacon given listed status". Place North West. 27 November 2020.
  3. ^ "Liverpool aerial zipline to be approved despite fears of 'Disneyisation' of historic city centre". The Independent. 25 June 2020.
  4. ^ Paton, Ryan (10 January 2024). "Update on iconic Radio City Tower sign after name change". Liverpool Echo. Retrieved 10 January 2024.
  5. ^ a b "St John's Beacon (Radio City Tower), Non Civil Parish - 1471669 | Historic England". historicengland.org.uk. Retrieved 15 November 2022.
  6. ^ "Prices & Times". St Johns Beacon. Retrieved 5 March 2023.
  7. ^ "Home Version 11". St Johns Beacon, Liverpool. Retrieved 16 June 2020.
  8. ^ Kirkham, Jenny (7 December 2019). "Views from Radio City show how Liverpool is constantly changing". Liverpool Echo.
  9. ^ @RadioCityNews (30 June 2020). "Breaking: @ZipWorldUK's plans to put..." (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  10. ^ "Exclusive: Liverpool Mayor blocks £5m zip wire plan". 2 September 2020.

External links

Records
Preceded by Tallest Building in Liverpool
1965 – 2008
Succeeded by
This page was last edited on 22 January 2024, at 14:38
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