
2012 image looking North

Radar-Ops 2012 image looking North

2012 image looking South

Radar-Ops 2012 image looking South
Source: http://www.radioparadise.com/content.php?name=Journal&file=show_entry&jid=57

FPS-26A foundation in foreground; FPS-27 remains in the background

Interior of the remains of the FPS-27 tower.
Fall 2005 photos by Scott Murdock


Ed. Note: Time is really starting to show on these buildings now

Looking approx. northwest, across the housing area to the station
Photos and notes by Gene McManus
Email: gmcmanus@radomes.org
A portion of our summer vacation was a trip back to Minot to have a look at the 786th as it appears today. I had been in contact with Bill Kickert, who was a "lifer" who spent most of his career at the 786th, and currently lives in Minot. He arranged a site tour with the present owners, who were gracious enough to open up the site and all the buildings for our perusal, and to have us into their home, in the old 786th housing area, for cold drinks when we were through. Bill and I, and our wives spent about two hours rummaging around the old squadron. It was a pretty nostalgic afternoon, and even knowing what it was going to look like, it was pretty depressing.
As the accompanying photos suggest, the site is rapidly deteriorating. There is considerable moisture damage to most buildings, due to roof damage over the years.
Gene McManus
September, 1998

The 786th doesn't look too bad as you approach the gate on the access road

However, when you get there, and are greeted by the current residents, and
see the present state of the buildings, it's another story. These cattle
are grazing around the remnants of the old AN/FPS-6B tower. The AN/FPS-27
tower is in the right background.

All that remains of the AN/FPS-27 tower.
From an email from Bob Redding:
The tall metal structure in the photo, appears to be part of the
antenna support pedestal. This pedestal extended from the ground, all
the way up through the center of the building to the base of the
antenna. It was not normally visible inside the building, except
between the floor and ceiling on the top floor.
The larger concrete structure, appears to be the two 50,000 volt power supply vaults. There is a dividing wall inside, between the two smaller square ventilator openings. This view is of the rear, outside wall of the FPS-27. This structure is much larger than it *seems* in the photo. These enclosures resembled Bank vaults, and would probably be very difficult to demolish.
The smaller object in the foreground, with the steps, appears to be part of the cooling tower support structure.

The operations building was very musty-smelling, probably owing to its
being perpetually dark, with no sunlight to dry it out. The moldy smell
forced my wife to not tour it. There's a painting of the "Spirit of '76"
flag on the wall in the old manual ops room, still in good condition, but
my flash was too puny to get a decent photo of it.

The NCO Club seems especially dilapidated.