Prior to the 1940s: 4QG and 4QR Initially, radio transmission was totally from within the
Brisbane city centre. The first transmitter for radio station
4QG was located in an inner
courtyard in the
Executive Building in the Brisbane city centre. Operated by the
Queensland Government, it started transmitting in 1925. A more powerful transmitter replaced it in 1926, on the eighth floor of the then new State Government Insurance Building (from 1933 known as the Taxation building) at the corner of
George and
Elizabeth Streets. The involvement of the Australian Broadcasting Commission (now the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, ABC) started in 1930, with the
Postmaster General's Department (PMG) being responsible for technical operation. Major modifications were made to the transmitter during the ABC's use of the transmitter. In 1935, a survey team from the Postmaster General (PMG) Research Laboratories in
Melbourne selected the Bald Hills site, then a farm, as a future location for a possibly high-powered transmitter for 4QG, but no land acquisition occurred at that time. At that stage radio station
4QG had been in existence for ten years (since 27 July 1925), and the
National Broadcasting Service (NBS, later the ABC) for five years (since 31 January 1930). Radio station
4QR was officially opened in 1938, with transmission from the roof of the Central Automatic Exchange Building in Elizabeth Street.
The move to Bald Hills At the start of
World War II, Brisbane's skyline was dominated by five high aerial towers, of which two served 4QG and one
4QR. A further two towers served commercial stations. Land acquisitions for the current Bald Hills site commenced in 1940. The first aerial was erected on the site in 1941; it was constructed from and bore casing and was high. The transmitter building was made of brick with a
fibro roof. It was built by Thomas Frederick of Days Road,
Wilston, under a contract awarded in July 1941, and work had started by October 1941. The farm buildings were removed at about this time. In March 1942
General Douglas MacArthur arrived in Australia to be appointed supreme commander of the
Allied Forces in the
South-West Pacific. The
AMP Building in
Queen Street, Brisbane, (now the
MacArthur Chambers) was chosen for MacArthur's headquarters because of its central location and
reinforced concrete roof. It was feared that the presence of all these high aerial towers would act as a navigational aid for Japanese aircraft seeking to attack MacArthur's headquarters. This accelerated the need to shift the transmitters out of the city centre. The first transmission from the Bald Hills site was of 4QR, on 24 March 1942, using the transmitter moved the previous night from the Central Telephone Exchange in the city. In April 1942, the 4QG transmitter was also relocated to Bald Hills but not to this site but to another Bald Hills site leased from the commercial station
4BH. Known as Fischle's Jam Factory, the 4BH site was at Roghan Road near Neville Road, next to Fischle's. Bald Hills residents of the time were not impressed by this transfer of risk of Japanese attack to their area. As the Queensland segment of the National Broadcasting Service (NBS) was restricted to Brisbane,
Rockhampton and
Townsville, it was proposed to use high frequency (
short wave) transmission to give some cover to the rest of Queensland. VLQ first went to air on 17 February 1943, transmitted by STCA880A. Land acquisitions for the present site continued through to July 1943 when the
Australian Government resumed the 114 acre (46ha) property from J W Guy. The transmitter building was extended from 1945 to 1946, while the existing vertical radiator was erected in 1947. The building was further extended 1962, and has since been internally modified at least twice when equipment was upgraded: once in 1968 and again in about 1994. In two later stages, (c 1970, 1980) there were minor reductions in the land holding of the site, for road widening and subdivisional redevelopment. The current area of the site is 43ha. == Description ==