Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Yerevan TV Tower

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Type
  
TV and Radio broadcast

Completed
  
1977

Height
  
312 m

Location
  
Roof
  
311.7 m (1,023 ft)

Opened
  
1978

Yerevan TV Tower httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

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Red Bridge - Yerevan, Great Bridge of Hrazdan, Davtashen Bridge, Yerevan Botanical Garden, Katoghike Tsiranavor Church of

Yerevan tv tower


Yerevan TV Tower (Armenian: Երևանի հեռուստաաշտարակ) is a 311.7-metre (1,023 ft) high lattice tower on Nork Hill in Yerevan, near city downtown, Armenia. It was built from 1974 to 1977 as a replacement for the old 180-metre (590 ft) high TV tower at Yerevan. It is the tallest structure in the city.

Contents

Map of Yerevan TV Tower, Garegin Hovsepyan St, Yerevan, Armenia

Yerevan tv tower at night


Overview

Installation of the tower in 1977 allowed to receive wide variety of programs from the Moscow Central television, as well as from other Soviet Union republics. The average daily length of programs broadcast by Armenian television reached twelve hours, of which two-and-a-half hours in color, including four hours, thirty-five minutes of own programming. Ninety-six percent of the population watched the first program. In 1978 it became possible to also receive the fourth channel of the Central television in Armenia

The percentage indicators in 1978 were:

  • News, 25
  • Music, 23
  • Educational, 13
  • Children's, 10
  • Social-political, 9
  • Military, 6
  • Youth, 4.5
  • Sport, 4
  • Advertisements and announcements, 4
  • Drama, 3.5
  • By 1978, the number of TV sets reached five hundred thousand, of which one hundred thousand were color. Armenian SSR was on the second place in the Soviet Union for the popularization of TV. The length of TV programs per day reached 19 hours. About fifty percent of the programs were in color and seventy percent were being recorded. Armenia became the first of the republics of the Soviet Union by the percentage of the TV audience and the volume of programs.

    The old tower was moved to Leninakan (current Gyumri), where it is still functional today.

    References

    Yerevan TV Tower Wikipedia


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