Reunion Tower is a 561 ft (171 m) observation tower and one of the most recognizable landmarks in Dallas, Texas. Located at 300 Reunion Blvd. in the Reunion district of downtown Dallas, the tower is part of the Hyatt Regency Hotel complex, and is the 15th tallest building in Dallas. A free-standing structure until the construction of an addition to the Hyatt Regency Dallas in 1998, the tower was designed by the architectural firm Welton Becket & Associates.
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History
Reunion Tower, also known locally as "The Ball," was completed on February 2, 1978, along with the Hyatt Regency Dallas at Reunion, as part of an urban redevelopment project that also renovated the historic Union Station, which today services Amtrak, Dallas Area Rapid Transit, and the Trinity Railway Express to Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport and Fort Worth.
When it first opened, the tower included radio station KOAX-FM, now KRLD-FM 105.3 FM, once owned by Westinghouse Broadcasting ("Live twenty-four hours a day from five-hundred feet above the city"). Because it is not used as a broadcast tower it is not listed in the FCC Database.
Reunion Tower reopened its restaurant level on February 9, 2009, after it was closed for major renovations on November 16, 2007. The observation deck reopened October 5, 2013, just in time for the Tower's 35th anniversary.
The tower is located about 1,000 feet from Dealey Plaza and the site of the assassination of John F. Kennedy.
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Architecture
The tower consists of three floors with circular floor plans on top of four shafts of poured-in-place concrete. A central cylindrical shaft houses stairs and mechanical equipment. Three rectangular shafts, containing elevators, rise parallel to the central shaft. Each shaft's outfacing wall is made up of glass panels, affording views of the city during the 68-second elevator ride to the top. Before the 2008 renovations, the first level housed the observation deck, the second a revolving restaurant called Antares, and the third level a club called The Dome. The top three floors are encased in an open-air sphere. The sphere is a geodesic dome formed with aluminum struts. Each of the struts' 260 intersections is covered by aluminum circles with lights in the center.
At night, the globe at the top of the building is illuminated with 259 custom LED fixtures, manufactured by Altman Lighting and Color Kinetics, a division of Philips Solid State Lighting. Wiedamark, a Dallas-based LED lighting company, led the development, installation and programming of the lights. The original lighting fixtures were conventional incandescent and every unit used 130 watts of electricity. For comparison, the new LED lighting system with all of its color and animation capabilities requires less than 1/5th of the electricity of the old system. In fact, each point on Reunion Tower is using only as much electricity as an average nightlight and as much electricity as 2 nightlights at its brightest setting.
Every fixture has a combination of multiple red, green and blue (RGB) LEDs that are diffused behind a 3/4-inch thick opaque glass cover. While each fixture is very large at nearly 16 inches in diameter, they function the same way as a pixel on your mobile phone screen. By varying the intensity of red, green and blue, the system is able to create every visible color from pinks and purples to white. By moving these colors around the globe at a fluid rate, animations and movement is perceived. All 259 fixtures are controlled by Color Kinetics hardware to execute various computer-generated patterns and colors along the surface of the sphere. The DMX512 lighting protocol is used to communicate with the fixtures. Each fixture is manufactured from solid cast stainless steel and weighs over 20 pounds. As an iconic landmark on the Dallas skyline, lighting on the globe is also used for special events and holidays across the city. For example, the winter season will feature seasonal colors and animations; for St. Patrick's Day it will be illuminated in green; for patriotic events it will be lit in red, white and blue, and so on. The globe was lit up in rainbow colors on June 26, 2015 to celebrate the supreme court ruling which legalized same sex marriage.
Attractions
Celebrity chef Wolfgang Puck opened the fine-dining, revolving restaurant, Five Sixty on the tower's rotating top level on February 11, 2009. The name is a reference to the restaurant's elevation. The middle floor of the tower is used for special events managed by Wolfgang Puck Catering, which is based at nearby Union Station.
The Observation level is called the "GeO-Deck". The interior facility includes an interactive digital experience featuring information about Dallas landmarks, Reunion Tower itself, the events of November 22, 1963, live view high-definition cameras and more. The exterior of the observation deck features telescopes with views in every direction.
The Cloud 9 Cafe is accessible from the observation deck, serving meals and snacks with a 360-degree view from behind glass.
The gift shop at the tower's base features souvenirs related to Reunion Tower, Dallas and Texas and other novelty items.
In the media
- The Reunion Tower is the setting for the finale of the 1986 action film Getting Even.
- The landmark appears as a symbol of futurist society in the 1980 film The Lathe of Heaven (starring Bruce Davison).
- Shots of the building also make an appearance in the 2011 Terrence Malick film The Tree of Life.
- Reunion Tower can also be seen in the opening credits of the long-running CBS TV series Dallas.
- Reunion Tower can also be seen in the 1987 film Robocop (starring Peter Weller), although the film is set in Detroit.
- In the 1997 made-for-TV movie Asteroid (starring Annabella Sciorra) the Reunion Tower is abruptly destroyed during a meteorite shower on Dallas, Texas during the opening credits of the second half of the movie. This is the only known disaster movie to feature the tower in any scene of destruction.
- It appears in the season finale of The Amazing Race 26.
- The entertainment group Dude Perfect made a shot from Reunion Tower in their video "Reunion Tower Shot".
Source of the article : Wikipedia
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