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  #21  
Old Posted Feb 14, 2011, 1:56 AM
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The Ekibastuz GRES-2 Power Station in Ekibastuz, Kazakhstan perhaps? It has a 420 m chimney.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:GRES-2.jpg
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  #22  
Old Posted Feb 14, 2011, 2:25 AM
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Originally Posted by plinko View Post
^Not a chance those are '41 stories' tall. They look to be about the same size as the facility at the Port of Stockton in California, which top out at around 230ft.

It's just poor research on the part of the writer.
That was my hunch when I first read that article, I found it hard to believe they are that tall but considering the head of the port authority was interviewed I wondered. Maybe its actually 21 stories and 41 was a typo. It would be cool to say that your city has a 41 story grain elevator though. either way they are incredibly massive in size and you can only get so close to them because there are fences and guarded gates everywhere down there but those buildings are a part of my fascination with the Lake Calumet region.

I like what someone said about converting them into something. They are underutilized from what I have heard and that huge tanker in the pics is pretty much permanently docked there. My multi-million dollar idea is to convert the tanker into Chicago's first casino and convert the grain elevators into a hotel/condo complex and then build some kind of amusement park to the north on the shores of Lake Calumet (I am thinking of something that's a cross between the old Riverview amusement park and an educational theme park that harkens to Chicago's 1893/1933 world's fairs, almost EPCOT like) and connect it to the Pullman area with a revitalized Pullman factory as a world class railroad museum. Call the whole resort complex "Chicago World" and we have the northern US equivalent to Disney World. Actually this is an idea I have had for years since I was in middle school, I actually drew up some plans in my daydreaming days. Anyways sorry to go off topic.
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  #23  
Old Posted Feb 14, 2011, 6:38 AM
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Not anywhere near the tallest in the world, but my small city has some pretty substantial industrial power plants for a city its size. Better yet, they aren't on the outskirts of town, rather they were built with the immediate or greater downtown area.

Eckert Power Station: Stands 176.5 feet (53.8 meters) tall just the the roof platform, not couting the boiler units, which I'm sure push it over 200 feet. (external chimneys are over 600 feet)


self-taken


sporadicty

Ottawa Power Station: 172 feet (52.5 meters) tall to the roof. In a month or two, it'll reopen as a corporate headquarters for a regional insurance company.


self-taken


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  #24  
Old Posted Feb 14, 2011, 6:51 AM
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Somewhat unknown and a total waste of money, we here on the West Coast have our own Space Shuttle Assembly Building, located at Vandenberg Air Force Base, about 50 miles W-NW of Santa Barbara. It is called the Space Launch Complex 6 (SLC-6). The big draw of Vandenberg is that polar orbit is much easier to achieve from that location. However, it is also subject to heavy fog and terrible wind conditions. After the Challenger disaster, the chances of a Vandenberg shuttle launch basically became nill.

The cool thing about the Vandenberg building is that it has two 'halves' that actually move and can closeup together. The Shuttle Assembly Building is 280ft (85.34m) tall and the Mobile Service Tower is 324ft (98.75m) tall.

I've actually wondered over the years if these are the tallest buildings that move (the whole building shifts location)?


source

Seen here with the Atlantis test shuttle:

source

This is what it looks like closed up:

source


source


source

The facility has been heavily modified over the years (the mobile tower used to be about 40ft taller) to launch satellites into orbit via rockets. Here's a photo from the recent Delta IV launch, the first of it's kind on the West Coast:

source
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  #25  
Old Posted Feb 14, 2011, 3:37 PM
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^very neat. I never knew about this place.
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  #26  
Old Posted Feb 14, 2011, 5:19 PM
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^^ Doesn't really seem like the best use for that beautiful stretch of coastline though.
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  #27  
Old Posted Feb 14, 2011, 6:39 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Alpha View Post
What is the difference between a silo and a grain elevator?
Silo: It just store the grains and felt down to lower part into trucks for example
Grain Elevator: The name suggests that a lif inside the facility push up the grains into it.

Actually Silo comes further of the grain elevator for the grain perspective.
So silo is the store facility and grain elevator the transportation of it inside.
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  #28  
Old Posted Feb 14, 2011, 8:16 PM
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Originally Posted by Reesonov View Post
^^ Doesn't really seem like the best use for that beautiful stretch of coastline though.
Truly. Can you say, "off limits" to non-military personnel?
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  #29  
Old Posted Feb 14, 2011, 11:41 PM
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Do not have nearly all silos a grain elevator? Otherwise it would be difficult to fill it!
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  #30  
Old Posted Feb 15, 2011, 1:24 AM
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Grain elevator is usually used to describe a collection point of many silos with a system of screw elevators that are used to move the silage around. Most silos on a farm are filled using a conveyor belt or silage blower depending on what they are storing. Corn cobs would be poured into the top with a conveyor belt while alfalfa would be blasted up into the silo with a silage blower.

/random knowledge from growing up in a small town in Wisconsin...
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  #31  
Old Posted Jan 8, 2014, 5:44 AM
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Cable TV Tower, Hong Kong

Top floor is 171m, roof is 183m, spire is 194m

It has a cargo container elevator and 41 floors... also I think maybe the top floors are office??

There are a number of buildings in Hong Kong that are around 120m+ and 25-30 floors:
-Global Gateway
-Dynamic Cargo Centre
-Tsuen Wan International Centre
-Allied Cargo Centre
-Igor Industrial Building
-Hing Wai Centre

There's also a couple that are in industrial areas but I'm not 100% sure if they're industrial like Peninsula Tower and 9 Wing Hong Street. These industrial areas also have new buildings under construction based on google maps, maybe they'll be even taller?
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  #32  
Old Posted Jan 8, 2014, 6:45 AM
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The Kennecott Smokestack is 1,215 ft. high (370.4 meters). It releases gasses produced while smelting copper. The mine is also the deepest open pit mine in the world.


source


source

To get a scope of how big this mine complex is, Google Earth Salt Lake City. Note that virtually the entire mountain range west of the Salt Lake area is owned by the mine.
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  #33  
Old Posted Jan 11, 2014, 3:26 AM
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If we're talking chimneys the Inco Superstack in Sudbury, Ontario is apparently the tallest in the Western hemisphere and second tallest in the world at 380 m (1250 ft).



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inco_Superstack
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  #34  
Old Posted Jan 11, 2014, 6:00 AM
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  #35  
Old Posted Jan 13, 2014, 4:31 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Reesonov View Post
^^ Doesn't really seem like the best use for that beautiful stretch of coastline though.
I'm guessing that coastal land was utilized for the same reason as Cape Canaveral: if a rocket/satellite/spaceship explodes, it could do so over open water, rather than over land and populated areas.
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  #36  
Old Posted Jan 13, 2014, 5:47 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TownGuy View Post
If we're talking chimneys the Inco Superstack in Sudbury, Ontario is apparently the tallest in the Western hemisphere and second tallest in the world at 380 m (1250 ft).



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inco_Superstack
If the ESB was a chimney...
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  #37  
Old Posted Jan 13, 2014, 5:04 PM
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