19 Feb 2024

Student radio station tower destroyed in Port Hills blaze

From Nights, 9:30 pm on 19 February 2024
A small shed, warped and charred by a fire. The roof has collapsed in and the surrounding earth is smoking and bare, littered with debris.

Christchurch alternative radio station RDU had its transmission tower on Marley's Hill destroyed in the Port Hills blaze last week. Photo: RDU

The destruction of RDU's transmission tower on Marley's Hill during last week's blaze on the Port Hills hasn't stopped the alternative radio station from echoing across Christchurch.

The fire in the Port Hills - which broke out on Wednesday - has since been contained, after it ripped through 650 hectares.

Like everyone in Christchurch, RDU programme manager Liam Donnelly saw the smoke on Wednesday, but he told RNZ Nights' Emile Donovan he didn't realise the full extent of the damage until Thursday. 

And while they had been informed of the damage, it still hit home when the morning crew came into the studio on Thursday and heard nothing but static on the office speakers.

"If we didn't know, we knew then."

The station's broadcasts - which have been on the air since 1976 - can still be streamed on its website or through the RDU app, and they were still going out on the airwaves through a back-up transmitter at the university.

"We are the cockroach of radio stations, that's the term I've been using the past couple of days.

"Of course it's not as high quality - it's not lovely smooth listening, you wouldn't want to listen to it for too long."

A composite image showing a before and after of a radio transmission tower interior. On the left, the before, showing a set of hard drives and computer parts arranged on a shelf. On the right, the after, the same shelf set has been charred and most of the contents are on the floor, in ash.

The RDU transmission tower on Marley's Hill before and after the Port Hills fire. Photo: RDU

The RDU crew have not been allowed to see the damage to the equipment for themselves yet, and the station was now waiting for its insurance to get sorted before making plans for its next step. 

But Donnelly said the one silver lining from the loss of the gear was the "absolute generosity" of people wanting to help.

"We've been offered copious amounts of different pieces of equipment.

"It's been amazing, quite frankly."