Imperial College Radio
Broadcast area | Imperial College London |
---|---|
Frequency | Online |
Programming | |
Format | Contemporary |
Ownership | |
Owner | Independent |
History | |
First air date | 1976 |
Imperial College Radio or IC Radio is the student radio station at Imperial College London
History
IC Radio was founded in November 1975 with the intention of broadcasting to the student halls of residence from a studio under Southside. Broadcasting actually commenced in late 1976 on 999 AM although IC Radio has since stopped broadcasting over this frequency. Imperial College Radio pioneered a new system of broadcast, known as Leaky feeder and was the first station to be licensed by the Home Office for the use of this technique.[1] For a short period in 1989, IC Radio broadcast on FM under a Test and Development license, but this way never expanded into a full FM license.[2][3] In 2001 it moved to its current location, in the West Basement of Beit Quad over the internet www.icradio.com and, since 2004, on 1134 AM in Wye.
Studios
Historically, Imperial College Radio consisted of two studios, "Southside" and "Northside", named after the accommodation blocks under which they were situated. Southside was the main broadcast studio, whilst Northside was primarily designated as a recording/production studio. The two studios were linked via audio cables which ran through the College's system of service tunnels, enabling communications, and the ability for the Southside studio to broadcast the output of the Northside studio.
After relocating to the basement of Beit Quad in 2001, Imperial College Radio combined both studios in a single building, but retained its two-studio setup, with one studio focussed towards recording and another to live broadcast. Both studios were also greatly upgraded in terms of equipment.
Crocodile Club
The Alumni association for Imperial College Radio is known as The Crocodile Club, and was formed in 1985 by a group of students who were members of Imperial College Radio. The intention was to make sure that when people left the hallowed halls of Imperial College, that there was an easy way for them to keep in touch with each other, meet up now and then, and generally keep the fire burning. Further to this, Reggie was set up as the clubs official annual handbook, to publicise events, circulate the membership address list and provide an airing for the members many views and opinions. [4]
References
- ^ http://www.johnallen.com/icradio/press.html IC Radio Press Coverage
- ^ The Crocodile Club - The Alumni Association of Imperial College Radio: Reggie Volume 6, article 4
- ^ The Crocodile Club - The Alumni Association of Imperial College Radio: Reggie Volume 6, article 3
- ^ The Crocodile Club - The Alumni Association of Imperial College Radio: About