RAF Honiley

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

RAF Honiley
RAF Honiley
IATA: BHY – ICAO: none
Summary
Airport type Closed
Owner LucasVarity
Location Wroxall, Warwickshire
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
Tarmac
Tarmac
Tarmac

RAF Honiley was a Royal Air Force station located in Wroxall, Warwickshire seven miles (11 km) southwest of Coventry, England. The station closed in March 1958, and after being used as a motor vehicle test track, is presently subject to planning permission from Prodrive for development of their Fulcrum test and development facility.

Contents

[edit] History

Originally called Ramsey, it was renamed RAF Honiley in August 1941, and used by night fighter squadrons defending the Midlands during the Second World War:[1]

Like many stations, it collected a station mascot in the from of a Supermarine Spitfire, No. 7240M.[5] From April 1957, the station was placed on Care and Maintenance until closure[6]

[edit] Present day

After being taken over by LucasVarity for vehicle testing, current residents include Prodrive, Marcos and TRW.[7]

In addition to their existing automotive consultancy business, already based at the site since 2001, in March 2006 motor racing company Prodrive announced its intent to build a £200million, 200-acre (0.8 km²) motorsport facility called The Fulcrum.[8][9] Prodrive's statement in the planning application for the facility – which could house as many as 1,000 staff – boasted of "a motorsport complex which could eventually house Prodrive's new British Prodrive F1 team", further cementing Managing Director David Richards' intention to return to F1 in 2008.

As of 3 August 2006, Prodrive has won the support of the Warwick District Council planning committee for development of The Fulcrum.[10] The permission covers a highly advanced engineering research and development campus, a conference facility called the Catalyst Centre and new access road, a roundabout, infrastructure, parking and landscaping. The plans still have to be presented and agreed by the British government's Department for Communities and Local Government, and there is local opposition via the Fulcrum Prodrive Action Group (FPAG) to protect the rural nature of the community and the safety of the people that live within it.[7]

However, following rule changes banning so-called 'customer' cars from competing in F1, and legal proceedings undertaken by existing F1 manufacturer teams, Prodrive's F1 plans have been shelved indefinitely. There is no information relating to the effect this may have had on continuing with any part of the site's redevelopment. Prodrive's core motorsport business remains based at their existing Banbury headquarters.

[edit] References

[edit] External links