The tower was refurbished between 1999 and 2000 at a cost of £5 million. It reopened as
Radio City 96.7 (and Magic 1548) in August 2000. The outdoor observation deck, which had been located on the roof of the restaurant, was transformed into a second floor, holding the offices for the radio station. The studios were on the lower floor, which was previously the restaurant. The original revolving structure and machinery were left intact during the refurbishment. Brackets were added to lock the moving structure in place. The tower has been known to sway in heavy winds. This is a design feature and common in construction within skyscrapers and tall buildings in order to prevent structural damage from wind pressure. During the refurbishment between the first and second floors, the
Radio City 96.7 lettering was added. Until 17 April 2024 it was illuminated in yellow at night. Following the rebranding of Radio City as Hits Radio, the signage is no longer illuminated. Lights were added under the base of the crow's nest structure, which are illuminated all day and periodically change colour. The second floor windows are sometimes illuminated at night, often with a particular colour to mark certain events. The refurbishment added an advertising framework at the top of the tower, designed for both a fabric banner and illuminated light boxes. Window cleaning and exterior maintenance is performed by specialist teams, who descend down the side of the tower from the roof mounted Building Maintenance Unit (BMU). The roof houses the local 10C
Digital Audio Broadcasting multiplex for Liverpool. Hits Radio Liverpool and Greatest Hits Radio do not directly broadcast from the roof. Their FM signal is transmitted by the Allerton Park Transmitter, along with
BBC Radio Merseyside on 95.8FM. In 2017, the Liverpool-based tech startup Scan and Make organised the first edition of the art contest exhibition "Making Art 4.0" in the Radio offices. In 2018, an artwork banner was displayed on the beacon's advertisement framework. It was titled
Liverpool 2018, celebrating 10 years since the city's
2008 European Capital Of Culture events.
Radio City Talk ceased broadcasting on 31 May 2020, after it was deemed not financially viable due to low listening figures. Until December 2024, the building housed the studios and offices for the regional programming of
Hits Radio Liverpool and
Hits Radio Lancashire, as well as the national weekday breakfast show for
Greatest Hits Radio. On 28 October 2024,
Bauer Media announced that it would be vacating St Johns Beacon after 24 years, following a decision not to renew the lease. The final breakfast show to be broadcast from the building aired on 24 December 2024. == St Johns Beacon Viewing Gallery ==