Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

It's a flagpole, it's a palm tree . . . no, it's a phone system.

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

(I hope these aren't mind control towers. N)

 

Cell tower camouflage artists just want to blend in

 

http://napps.nwfusion.com/news/2004/0202widernetcelltowers.html

photos on url

 

 

It's a flagpole, it's a palm tree . . . no, it's a phone system.

 

By Denise Dubie

Network World, 02/02/04

 

Steve Meyer knows he's done his job right when no one notices his work.

 

That is, when someone passes by one of his palm trees or cacti without

realizing they are made of concrete - or that they are cell towers or

switches in disguise.

 

Advertisement:

 

 

" My biggest joy in cell tower camouflage is that I get to beautify areas for

everyone to enjoy, " says Meyer, whose firm, The Larson Co., also builds faux

landscapes for zoos and theme parks. " No one needs to know that beautiful

landscape has anything to do with cell phones. "

 

About a quarter of the estimated 130,000 cellular towers across the U.S. are

camouflaged, some as trees, others as flagpoles and still others as church

steeples. Hiding the towers is a tricky but essential part of many wireless

companies' strategies. After all, how do you hide something that stands 80

or 100 feet tall? Especially as carriers' expansion plans have led from

building towers mainly in the rural areas where no one cared what they

looked like to raising them in more populous areas where " not in my

backyard " fights have become commonplace.

 

Wireless providers try to strike a balance between supplying superior cell

coverage and maintaining the natural environment. It's not always easy,

because the costs of disguising a cell phone tower in a municipality can

skyrocket when materials and monthly leases come into play.

 

For example, AT & T Wireless has about 25,000 cell sites, some of which are

disguised, but the company says it's a challenge.

 

" While we try hard to work with communities to meet their needs, disguising

towers tends to increase the costs for cell siting, which could impact the

cost of providing service, " says Ritch Blasi, director of media relations at

AT & T Wireless.

 

Getting concept and financial support from the wireless provider is

critical, says Peter Sturdivant, a stealth consultant and agent for Stealth

Concealment Solutions in Charleston, S.C. Sturdivant, whose company

constructs and camouflages cell phone towers on the East Coast, says he

bases his cell tower disguises on how much time and money a cell company is

willing to spend.

 

 

" The best bang for the dollar is a flagpole, but that doesn't give us many

creative options, " he says.

 

Sturdivant would rather spend the time and money to build a work of modern

art and architecture in an urban or rural community. He says the process

involves first walking around an area and finding the highest point to place

a tower. Once the designer feels he picked a good spot in terms of radio

frequency, many meetings with local officials follow.

 

Gaining the right to build within a church tower or steeple about 70 feet

tall can cost carriers about $100,000 before construction even begins. With

a monthly rent or lease charge going to the church and working to maintain

the structure's unique charm, telecom companies can spend more than $1,000

per month per tower and can wait from six months to two years from inception

to see a project come to fruition.

 

Once the municipality and the carrier agree on the location, Sturdivant's

fun starts.

 

" Working with a historic building is the best because you can look at old

blueprints and match today's work with the work that was done 200 or 300

years ago or more, " he says.

 

He says he enjoys building cell towers into churches, which in the Northeast

were often built on hills because they represented the center of town

hundreds of years ago. He has done 30 such projects and each has involved

their own challenges, such as maintaining architectural integrity,

especially of older buildings. Performing that type of masonry

reconstruction and structure restoration helps him tap his architectural

interests.

 

" It ranges from gothic to Romanesque to modern, and I try to find as many

original drawings as I can to work from " he says.

 

For The Larson Co.'s Meyer, the disguises include rocks and cacti to mask

cell antennas and switches. He says simulating the deserts, palm trees and

more barren landscapes of the Southwest differs from locating a site in the

Northeast.

 

" We can't put as many branches on a palm tree, as say a pine tree, so we

have to get more creative in how we hide the technology, " Meyer says.

 

Of course, not all the towers are well-hidden, a real sore point for

camouflage experts.

 

Towers need to top between 80 or even 100 feet to clear tree line in many

parts of the country, but carriers looking to keep costs down will limit the

number of palm fronds or pine branches on a fake tree.

 

" When your lowest branch is at 60 feet, it looks pretty obvious and it just

isn't aesthetically pleasing, " Meyer says.

 

" My favorite question, is 'What type of tree can we use to put in a 170-foot

tower?' " Sturdivant says. " Look around; do you see any 170-foot trees?

Something like that will grab attention and not in a good way. "

 

Sturdivant cites one cell tower masquerading as a phony tree along Route 90

in Massachusetts near the Charlton Plaza.

 

" It's one of the ugliest towers I've ever seen. It looks like an upside-down

Christmas tree or a massive bottle brush, " Sturdivant says. " It's not one of

ours. I'm not going to be involved with anything ugly or cheap.

 

" There really isn't a telltale sign to spot a good stealth tower, " he says.

 

Got an idea for A Wider Net story? An offbeat technology industry-related

topic? A fascinating personality we should profile? Contact Executive News

Editor Bob Brown at bbrown

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...