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Re: [OM] Demise of a Landmark

Subject: Re: [OM] Demise of a Landmark
From: "John A. Lind" <jlind@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Sun, 05 Oct 2003 22:19:05 -0500
There were numerous gas towers built across the U.S. during the mid-1950's. Two sister towers built by the same firm were in Brooklyn, NY, until they were demolished a few years ago by the same firm that brought this one down. I've been told there were a number of these towers scattered across Europe also. The primary reason for the tower was the enormous gas demand by Continental Steel, a large steel mill that went bankrupt here during the mid-1980's (that's another long and sordid tale, especially about the pension fund that vaporized). Their open hearths and furnaces could demand more natural gas for short periods than the main gas pipelines could supply. The tower provided capacity to handle peak demands, but is no longer needed and hasn't been for about 20 years.

At one time, there were a number of companies here that used huge quantities of natural gas for furnaces. Continental Steel was one of them. Pittsburg Plate and Glass was another until it mysteriously burned down long ago. Kokomo Opalescent Glass, still in operation and the subject of my photography project late this Summer, also uses quite a bit of natural gas. Many of these companies established factories here when a natural gas pocket was discovered during the late-1800's. Its size was over-estimated and the local gas didn't last long. After that, it had to be piped in. There are other, larger natural gas pockets across central Indiana.

They stored natural gas in gaseous state and the tower is a "variable volume" design. There was a large circular and slightly domed plate that rode up and down inside the tower on bearings as the volume of gas storage changed. The tower was smooth on the inside and seals around the edge of the plate. To provide a regulated pressure on the the gass, the plate was weighted down by thousands of concrete blocks. Those blocks had to be removed before the rest of the tower was brought down.

Not seen in the photographs are Kokomo Gas and Fuel's offices right next to the tower on its south side. The small cylindrical tube on the exterior was the elevator used to access the top of the tower. The only structural damage during the demolition was from this elevator. Even though additional cables tied it to the tower to it ensure it collapsed with the tower wall, the bottom one broke and the lower section of the elevator tube clipped a corner of the building damaging the corner of the roof slightly. That was repaired in a couple of days. The concussion from the collapse (the air inside the tower had to go somewhere in a hurry) also took down some power lines running within about 20 feet of the tower. This was an event Indiana Power and Light had anticipated would very likely occur. They had trucks on scene waiting and that was restored by mid-day. It's quite amazing that debris from the tower never touched the lines or the poles.

Thanks,
-- John

At 09:17 PM 10/5/03, Siddiq wrote:

Nice... how was the NG stored inside? was the tower airtight or were there smaller stacked tanks or a flexible bladder or ???


--
/S
aim:iddibhai
icq:104079359
msidd004atstudentdotucrdotedu


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