Union Watersphere


The Union Watersphere, also known as the Union Water Tower, is a water tower topped with a sphere-shaped water tank in Union, New Jersey, United States and characterized as the World's Tallest Water Sphere.
Adjacent to U.S. Route 22, New Jersey Route 82, and the Garden State Parkway, the iconic tower has been a landmark since its construction. The tower was originally commissioned the Elizabethtown Water Company and is now owned by American Water. Standing tall, it was originally built in 1964 by Chicago Bridge and Iron Company at the cost of $89,500 and holds of well water. Due to its proximity to an airport, at the request of the Federal Aviation Administration, a red stroboscopic beacon was constructed atop the tower in 2008, adding of height. The pedestal is used as a telecommunications tower.
The tower is a grey-white, and in the past has been painted blue, with the name of the town in large letter across the sphere. Its location at a major intersection of some of the state's busiest roads, and proximity to Newark Liberty International Airport, affords millions of people each year a view of the structure. A museum dedicated to the watersphere is located in Austin, Texas and is operated by a former Union resident. Another famous sphere, sometimes called the "world's largest light bulb" is located nearby at the Edison Memorial Tower.

Related and similar structures

A February 2012 Star Ledger article suggested a water tower in Erwin, North Carolina completed in early 2012, tall and holding, had become the World's Tallest Water Sphere. However photographs of the Erwin water tower revealed the new tower to be a water spheroid.
The water tower in Braman, Oklahoma, built by the Kaw Nation and completed in 2010, is tall and can hold. Slightly taller than the Union Watersphere, it is technically a spheroid. Another tower in Oklahoma, built in 1986 and billed as the "largest water tower in the country", is tall, can hold, and is located in Edmond.
The Earthoid, a perfectly spherical tank located in Germantown, Maryland is tall and holds gallons of water. The name is taken from it being painted to resemble a globe of the world.
The golf ball-shaped tank of the water tower at Gonzales, California is supported by three tubular legs and reaches about high. The Watertoren in Eindhoven, Netherlands contain three spherical tanks, each in diameter and capable of holding of water, on three spires were completed in 1970.