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Community Corner

Fate of Mt. Um's Radar Tower Uncertain

The iconic and historic cube-shaped radar tower on Mt. Umunhum is at risk of demolition. A public meeting on what to do will be held July 18 at Quinlan Center, at 6:30 p.m.

 

Mount Umunhum is on its way to becoming a recreation destination, but the question remains of what to do with the iconic chunky radar tower on top that is visible for miles from the valley floor.

People will have a chance to weigh in on the five-story tower's fate at a to be held at beginning with an open house at 6:30 p.m.

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Patch will cover that meeting and provide a follow up, so stay tuned.

Mt. Um and the radar tower were used during the Cold War from about 1958 to 1980 when it was decommissioned and all the classified materials were removed, including the 125-foot-long rotating rooftop radar dish.

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There are 18 towers similar to the one on Mt. Um, but not one has been torn down, according to , and he doesn't see any valid reason to make this one the first.

"Each one has been given a purpose in its afterlife," he says.

Jaber is an engineer by trade and has become a historian and archivist for the Almaden Air Force Station (AAFS)—of which the tower was a part of—and has organized several reunions for the veterans who served at the station during the Cold War. 

He actively beseeches the Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District, which purchased the site in 1986, to preserve the tower as a piece of Bay Area history. He has more than 850 signatures on a petition to save the tower as proof that he does not stand alone in his plea.

The concrete used to build the radar tower most likely came from Lehigh Southwest Cement, known then as Kaiser Permanente Cement.

In a special article for the Mercury News, the district's general manager, Steve Abbors, proposed the following three options for the tower:

  • Tear it down and restore the mountain;
  • Leave the foundation and part of its walls to create a public gathering place;
  • Leave the tower intact and make it available for viewing

Each option includes the district's intention to honor the veterans who served on AAFS, as well as the Ohlone people who are believed to have used the area for prayer. AAFS stationed the 682nd Aircraft Control and Warning Squadron with up to 120 personnel and their families. It had a bowling alley, housing, its own water and power generation, and a 100-man underground bomb shelter.

"No one else knows but us radar guys what it was like during the Cold War," G. Pittenger, who served at the station from 1974-75, . "We didn't fight with guns. We fought with scopes and meters. We fought with our intelligence...Our country depended on us—and we came through."

Sitting empty now is no reason to allow the tower to be demolished, Jaber says.

"To tear it down just because it looks ugly, or what it costs to maintain it, those are all the wrong reasons. It's such an important part of not just the South Bay's history, but the entire Bay Area," he says.

What do you think the open space district should do? Comment below.  

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