I can’t get past the mental image of pollution being OK if you piped it 300 
feet up into the atmosphere.

Also I remember when protesters climbed the 450 ft Fisk coal power plant 
smokestack in Chicago.
http://www.treehugger.com/corporate-responsibility/greenpeace-activists-scale-450-ft-smokestack-on-100-year-old-chicago-coal-plant-updates.html

tallest smokestack in the world:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ekibastuz_GRES-2_Power_Station

this one in Utah has an elevator:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kennecott_Smokestack


From: Jeremy 
Sent: Monday, September 28, 2015 9:32 PM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: [AFMUG] Smokestack towers

I have the opportunity to go up on some of the tallest structures around, but 
they are smokestacks built in the late 1800s.  They are probably 300' tall.  I 
can find a ton of examples of where companies have done this by searching 
'smokestack cell tower' on Google Image search, but I have some real concerns.  
One concern, the stacks in this area seem to have been grandfathered in, as 
they have no warning lights on top.  Two, we live in an earthquake zone.  It is 
not a matter of 'if', but 'when'.  So, these will likely come tumbling down.  
When that happens, are people going to point fingers at the company who added 
weight to the structure when it crushes someone? 

There are some obvious engineering hurdles (renting a crane every time there is 
an issue, or mounting low enough to rent a man lift, adding backup equipment in 
case of failure, etc.), but those can be overcome.  I am primarily concerned 
about liability, and the potential for having to update the structure to 
include lighting.  Has anyone on this list ever attempted something on the 
scale of a 300' smokestack from the turn of the century?  Any pointers, or 
specific law firms that I should contact?  Seriously debating just scrapping 
the idea....

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