Google Sightseeing takes you on tour of the world as seen from satellite, using the free Google Earth program, or Google Maps in your web browser. Each weekday your guides James and Alex present new weird and wonderful sights as suggested by readers.

The editors: James & Alex

Spare Runways

Monday, 8th October 2007 by James

If you happened to own an airfield, and you just happened to have some spare runways lying around - what would you do with them?

RAF Thurleigh was built during WWII and after the war became a development site known as RAE Bedford, until it was eventually decommissioned in 1994. Since then the airfield has been split into two sections; the Northern half is used for the Bedford Autodrome race track, and the runways are used as mass car-storage.

Last weekend I took a microlight flight over RAE Bedford for a closer look. I didn’t actually fly the microlight (the pilot was doing that), I just sat in the back and bored the pilot with “Oooh, it’s like a live version of Google Earth!” every couple of minutes.

Anyway, this extra insight enables me to tell you that most of the vehicles looked brand-spanking new, sometimes with 20 or so of the same model lined up next to each other.

Wombleton airfield was also built for WWII - operating as a Canadian Air Force “conversion unit”, where pilots who were used to flying small 2 engine planes were trained to fly 4 engines instead. Unlike the Bedford facility however, somebody decided that one of the main runways should instead be used for pig farming.

Unless this is a top-secret facility involved in the genetic engineering of pigs that fly?

Thanks to d5skipper, Oliver Laumann & others and Trina

10 Responses to 'Spare Runways'

  1. 1. Rob says:

    They aren’t the Rovers are they?

  2. 2. Neill says:

    There is also the Bernard Matthews turkey farms making good use of the old airfields in East Anglia

    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  3. 3. Uberadada says:

    This one in the New Forest (UK) is a rather nice Placemark: Campsite / Google Earth, even if the ground is slightly too hard to hammer tent pegs into! I am guessing it is WW2 in origin…

  4. 4. julian says:

    If you want identical cars: Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  5. 5. Ian says:

    The former Downsview Air Force base in Toronto has similarly been used for overflow storage by Chrysler for several years:

    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

    Bombardier still uses the runways for their testing facility at the southern end of the field.

  6. 6. Loz says:

    ha!

    I recommended this site about a year ago. Great to see it up here, though. Just goes to show that when you buy a ‘new’ car, it’s actually been sitting in a car park for several weeks or months beforehand.

    Also, south westish from the runway is this test complex, featuring a rather cool looking wind tunnel.

    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  7. 7. Lars Dybdahl says:

    The biggest pile of wood in the world was established on a former military runway in Byholma, Sweden:

    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

    Closer pictures:

    http://picasaweb.google.com/ldybdahl/ByholmaWood?authkey=vEVe9dvKC9I

  8. 8. Michael says:

    You could always build a racetrack around the old runway and then put a new one in just outside the track: Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

    This is Talladega Superspeedway in Talladega, AL — 2.66 mile long raceway, home to 2 NEXTEL Cup events per year. The old runways inside the racetrack are now used as parking during race weekends.

  9. 9. Cookie monster says:

    Take your pick!

    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  10. 10. Romanov says:

    I didn’t thought pigs would look that pink from space.

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