Falcon box comes down as CTV tower removed
The transmission tower beside CTV Kitchener’s old station has been fully dismantled.
Starting with removal of the antennas and radio equipment on Wednesday, construction crews took the tower down step by step.
"We're going to package it all up and ship it out by transport,” construction site supervisor Barry Lacroix of Lacroix Construction Co. Ltd. said Wednesday.
“After that is complete, another crane will mobilize in here and we'll start cutting the tower down."
- MORE: CTV KITCHENER LEAVES ITS LONGTIME HOME
Crews worked through the rain and the snow, eventually removing the tower in sections, and cutting the pieces up to make a pile.
The dismantled transmission tower is seen in the former station's parking lot on Dec. 1, 2023. (Colton Wiens/CTV Kitchener)
The tower has helped CTV broadcast to outside the Region of Waterloo for years.
“That tower was our signal feed to Baden, which is where our transmitter site is for over the air,” said Randy Jacobs, Bell Media regional operations manager.
“We used that right up until we made the move to here, so it was with us for quite a while. We also had cellular added to it, so Bell Cell put their 5G network on it,” Jacobs said.
The nesting box is seen on the tower in 2018. (File photo/CTV Kitchener)
FALCON FAMILY HOME
Besides its use for CTV and cellular connection, peregrine falcons started using a satellite dish on the tower as a home in 2013. A nesting box was installed two years later, giving the birds a place to return to almost every year since.
“Overwhelming success. Your peregrines have been producing in that nest box ever since. It has been a huge bolster to the recovery of this species,” Mark Nash, executive director of the Canadian Peregrine Falcon Foundation, said.
CTV Kitchener's falcon gave viewers a live look inside the nest for years. (File photo/CTV Kitchener)
Nash said each year the birds choose somewhere to nest. The peregrines were spotted by the tower this year, but didn’t use the box to nest. With the tower coming down, the shelter has been removed and preserved. Nash said he hopes residents will watch for where the peregrines go the next spring, so the nest can be moved to wherever the birds choose next.
“You still have a pair that’s in Kitchener-Waterloo, they just haven’t shown us where they’re going to set up house yet. So we’re looking for a lot of support for those eyes in the skies especially come March time,” Nash said.
Experts attach bands to a pair of baby falcons at the CTV Kitchener station on June 1, 2022. (Spencer Turcotte/CTV Kitchener)
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Bank of Canada drops key interest rate
Canada’s central bank has cut interest rates for the fifth consecutive time as the country's economy grows at a slower rate than projected.
Poilievre's Conservatives still in majority territory: Nanos seat projections
The Liberals' promise of a temporary GST break and $250 rebate cheques haven't benefited Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his minority government when it comes to public support, according to Nanos Research data.
'Baseball-sized hail': Toronto man owes car rental company $18K after hailstorm
A Toronto man is on the hook for about $18,000 after a car he rented over the summer was pelted by baseball-sized hail.
Canada Post strike continues as sides clash on wages
Negotiations between Canada Post and the union representing its workers appear to be in a deadlock as the two sides remain far apart on wages and other issues.
New Vancouver mom temporarily discharged from hospital to see Taylor Swift concert
A Vancouver woman didn’t let an emergency C-section keep her from Saturday’s Taylor Swift concert.
'He lost his spirit': Family wants answers after Indigenous man's braids cut at Edmonton hospital
The Saskatchewan family of an Indigenous man whose braids were cut off during a stay at the Royal Alexandra Hospital in Edmonton, without permission, is searching for answers.
WATCH Video captures lookalike contest for suspected CEO assassin in New York
Several people attended a lookalike contest for a suspect in the murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson in New York City on Dec. 7.
Saudi Arabia officially announced as the 2034 World Cup host. Human rights groups warn of 'unimaginable human cost'
Global soccer governing body FIFA has officially announced the hosts for the next two men's World Cups. However, the outcome was no surprise.
The Israeli Jews who allegedly spied for Iran in biggest infiltration in decades
Israel's arrest of almost 30 mostly Jewish citizens who allegedly spied for Iran in nine covert cells has caused alarm in the country and points to Tehran's biggest effort in decades to infiltrate its arch foe, four Israeli security sources said.