Crescent Junction Wireless Relocates Fourteen Miles Closer to Moab
Several times each year, I drive the thirty-one miles south on U.S. Highway 191 from Crescent Junction to Moab, Utah. Other than  the industrial-sized natural  gas drilling rig hiding off to the left, the first half of the drive  features an unremarkable desert environment. About four miles north of Canyonlands Field  there is finally something interesting to look at. To
 the southwest, atop a  bluff is a lattice-steel communications tower. 
With its heavy structure, the  tower looks more like an  old-energy oilrig than a communications tower. By its shape and size, the  tower appears designed to support heavy loads and to withstand high winds.
During my April 2012  transit to Moab,
 I decided to investigate what purpose this unusual tower  might serve. 
Since the tower access road intersects with Highway 191 on a  straight 
stretch of four-lane road, I planned early for my exit. Speeding and  
tailgating are common along this stretch of highway, so I slowed and 
waited  patiently for traffic to clear. As I approached the 
intersection, I braked hard.  In a cloud of desert dust, my truck and 
travel trailer soon came to rest in a  run-off area just beyond the 
intersection.
Although I had hoped to take the access road up to the top of the bluff, not far  from the highway I encountered a locked gate. Not wanting to trespass into a secure  location,
 I took the time to read the only available informational sign.  From 
that mandated steel sign, I soon had enough information to research what
 I  call the Moab Tower.
Owned by American Tower (NYSE:  AMT), the site name for the structure is “Crescent  Junction”.
 The real Crescent Junction is almost fourteen miles north of the  site.
 With over 47,000 owned or managed tower sites around the world, the  
Crescent Junction tower is one AMT’s wireless network colocation towers.
 With  its one hundred eighty-five foot height, I could imagine the 
tower having a  clear line of sight to another AMT tower at Green River, Utah.  Looking southeast toward Moab, I could not determine if another energy  tower above Moab 
might facilitate communications there. As it turns out, the tower was once part of the AT&T microwave tower network. 
After my ten-minute visit to the “Moab  Tower”, I decided to get back on the road. As I returned to my rig, I  noticed that the stop sign at the highway intersection had torn loose from its  mounts. There it hung head  down, with a view of the Klondike Bluffs in the  background. After waiting for traffic to clear, another cloud of dust followed  me as I swung back on the  highway to Moab.
    
  
By James McGillis at 05:11 PM | | Comments (0) | Link
