In 1927, the Conservation Department built a 60-foot-tall (18 m) Aermotor LS40 steel tower. The first standard design for the observer cabins was made in 1922, which had to be 12 by 16 feet (3.7 m × 4.9 m) in size and roofed/sided with asphalt shingles. A cabin of this design was built on the mountain the same time as the tower. The summit was accessed via a short train ride from Kingston, which brought visitors near the tower. In 1950, the tower was closed and disassembled then moved eight miles (13 km) north to a new site on Overlook Mountain, where it still remains today.[2]