• December 1924: After the end of the First Radio Exhibition, construction of the radio tower was started. For this fair, at the location of the today's radio tower, a 120 meters tall antenna mast was erected, which served as crane for building the tower. • April 1925: The radio tower is finished in the infrastructure. • September 25, 1925: Inauguration of the transmitter on medium wave frequency 520.8 kHz. A single
T-antenna was strung between the top of the tower and an 80-meter-high guyed steel framework mast. • 1925–26: To protect visitors from electrical hazards, the radio tower was grounded about its elevator shaft, although this directed the beam of the radio transmitter away from the center of Berlin. • March 28, 1926: Acceptance of the radio tower by the construction offices. • September 3, 1926: Radio tower opened to the public at the inauguration of the Third Great German Radio Exhibition (
Funkausstellung). • 1929: Retuning of the medium wave transmitter to 716 kHz, first television transmission tests. • December 20, 1933: The new large
transmitter in Berlin Tegel takes over the broadcast transmissions from the radio tower. After this, the medium wave transmitter at the radio tower is only a backup transmitter for Berlin Tegel. • 1934: Retuning of the medium wave transmitter (as a backup unit for Berlin Tegel), to 834 kHz • March 22, 1935: From an antenna of the top of the radio tower, the first regular television program of the world is transmitted • August 22, 1935: Major fire in the exhibition hall at the radio tower destroys all transmission devices at the radio tower. Flying sparks also burn out the tower restaurant. • December 23, 1935: Resumption of television broadcasts. • 1938: Television transmitting equipment removed from the tower. • 1939–1945: The radio tower serves as a warning and observation post. • April 19, 1945: Projectiles destroy one of the four legs of the tower at a height of 38 meters. The restaurant is again burned out. • 1945: Repair of the destroyed tower leg with 800 kg screws and 7.2 tons steel. • 1948: Experiments with directed radio transmission toward the mountain of
Harz. • May 28, 1950: The tower restaurant reopens. • 1951: Assembly of one
superturnstile antenna on the top of the tower for the broadcast of
FM radio and television programs. With this antenna, the tower grew around 12 meters, from 138 meters to 150 meters. • October 1, 1951: Resumption of the television transmissions which were disrupted by World War II and the immediate post-war period. • May 15, 1963: After completion of the 230-meter-high transmission mast near
Scholzplatz, regular transmissions of television and broadcast programs from the tower were almost terminated. • 1973: End of any regular broadcast transmission from the radio tower. • 1989: Disassembly of the tower's last transmitters for broadcast of radio and television. ==See also==