As promised in my previous post, here are a few photos of the views from the Bantiger communications tower. The link concealed in this blog's title takes you to the official Swisscom info document on the tower (technical data, specifications, history). Below: view from half-way up the publicly accessible part of the tower, of the historic "signal" indicating an important geographical location.
Below: view northward, the blue band below the sky is the Jura mountain range. Far left, a glimpse of Lake Neuchâtel.
A closer look at the structure -- my one previous visit to the tower was to the old version, where the steps wound up and the view was much less obstructed by fine wire grid. One needed a really good head for heights. This feels a lot sturdier and more solid.
The final photo was taken at the foot of the tower. The inscription reads:
"Invisible to the bare eye from this point, at an altitude of 186 m on top of the Bantiger communications tower, a 140 cm sewing needle made of stainless steel is as exposed to the raw forces of nature as were human beings at the time of its invention. When lightning threads its way through the needle's ear, it joins prehistory with the present.
The needle's inventor is drilling a hole into this tool, making communication technology a reality, a technology without which this tower would not exist.
Please consider this miracle of technology as a pedestal, such stands before you the MONUMENT TO THE SEWING NEEDLE – one of humanity's most important inventions."
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