Mickey pylon


The Mickey pylon is a double-deadend pole-type 230-kV power line pylon in front of Osceola Substation, which is used by The [Walt Disney Company] division Reedy Creek Energy Services for the power supply of Walt Disney World near Orlando, Florida, and which was completed on February 15, 1996. The pylon is in the form of a stylized Mickey Mouse head. It consists of a pole carrying a circular steel tube ring in diameter, at which two smaller elliptical rings with minor axis lengths of and major axis lengths of. The head weighs. It is located along Interstate 4 on the north side of the highway, at the junction with World Drive and the Florida [State Road 417|Central Florida GreeneWay].
As the rings were not transportable on public roads, they were designed for an assembly at the construction site. Each ring is constructed from galvanized steel tubing.
The support pole was fabricated by North American Pole Corp., Dallas, Texas, United States, while the rings were bent by Bend-Tec of Duluth, Minnesota, from steel tubes manufactured in Chicago, Illinois, and transported to NAPCO for galvanization.
The pylon can be illuminated at night by fiber-optic cables at the rings, which are fed from a laser installed at the ground through a telecommunications-grade fiber running inside the pole.
Polymer insulators are used to minimize visual effects.

History

In March 1995, plans to start building the pole were created by a contract signed by Tampa Electric and the Reedy Creek Improvement District. The pylon serves to connect a nearby TECO-built substation to a transmission line owned by the Orlando Utilities Commission.