Tower
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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For other uses, see Tower (disambiguation).
A tower is a tall man-made structure, always taller than it is wide, and usually much higher. Towers are generally built to take advantage of their height and can stand alone or as part of a larger structure. Examples of the various uses of towers include:
- To save ground-level space: skyscrapers, cooling tower, chimney
- To enhance views: tourist towers, air-traffic control tower, railroad yard tower, harbor control tower, filming tower
- To increase strategic advantage: prison watch tower, defensive walls, siege tower, fire lookout tower, camera tower
- To increase potential energy: storage silo, water tower, drilling tower, ski-jump ramp
- To enhance communications: radio mast/tower, lighthouse, light tower, minaret, bell tower, clock tower
- As support: suspension bridge, cable-stayed bridge, pylon, aerial tramway support pillar
- To access tall or high objects: launch tower, service tower, supply tower, scaffold, tower wagon
- To access atmospheric conditions aloft: wind turbine, meteorological measurement tower, tower telescope, solar power station
- To protect from exposure: BREN Tower
- For industrial production: shot tower
- To drop objects: drop tower, bomb tower, diving platform
- To test height-intensive applications: elevator test tower
- To improve structural integrity: thyristor tower
- To mimic towers or provide height for training purposes: fire tower, parachute tower
- As art: Gettysburg National Tower, Eiffel Tower
- For recreation: rock climbing tower
- As a symbol: Tower of Babel, The Tower (Tarot card), church tower
Skyscrapers are often not classified as towers, although most have the same design and structure of towers. In the United Kingdom, tall domestic buildings are referred to as tower blocks. In the United States, the now-destroyed World Trade Center had the nickname the Twin Towers, a name shared with the Petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur.
[edit] Etymology
Old English torr is from Latin turris via Old French tor. The Latin term together with Greek τύρσις was loaned from a pre-Indo-European Mediterranean language, connected with the Illyrian toponym Βου-δοργίς. With the Lydian toponyms Τύρρα, Τύρσα, it has been connected with the ethnonym Τυρσήνοί as well as with Tusci (from *Turs-ci), the Greek and Latin names for the Etruscans (Kretschmer Glotta 22, 110ff.)
The term "tower" is also sometimes used to refer to firefighting equipment with an extremely tall ladder designed for use in firefighting/rescue operations involving high-rise buildings.
[edit] See also
- Additionally guyed tower
- Architectural structure
- Bell tower
- Broch
- Campanile, Leaning Tower of Pisa
- Inclined towers
- Leaning Tower of Pisa
- List of towers
- Partially guyed tower
- Radio masts and towers
- Tower house
- Turret
- Utility pole
- Watchtower (fortification)
- World's tallest structures