MOD St Athan

MoD St Athan

One of several entrance gates to RAF / MOD / DARA St Athan
IATA: DGXICAO: EGDX
Summary
Airport type Military
Owner Ministry of Defence
Operator St Athan
Location St Athan, South Wales
Elevation AMSL 163 ft / 50 m
Coordinates 51°24′17″N 003°26′09″W / 51.40472°N 3.43583°W / 51.40472; -3.43583
Map
EGDX

Location in the Vale of Glamorgan

Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
08/26 1,828 5,997 Asphalt

MOD St Athan (IATA: DGX, ICAO: EGDX) is a large Ministry of Defence unit near the village of St Athan in the Vale of Glamorgan, southern Wales. It was the designated site for the United Kingdom's new defence training academy, but the programme was cancelled on 19 October 2010. It once claimed to be the largest Royal Air Force (RAF) station.[1]

The base has been home to the RAF No. 4 School of Technical Training throughout its life,[2] as well as a major aircraft maintenance unit. St Athan has also been used to house British Army units, including the 1st Battalion, Welsh Guards. At one time it was home to a large collection of historical aircraft.

The only squadrons to operate out of St Athan on a regular basis are the University of Wales Air Squadron (one of fourteen RAF University Air Squadrons), flying Grob Tutors and No 634 Volunteer Gliding Squadron using Vigilant T.1s. 2300 Squadron of the Air Training Corps is also located on the Station.

Between May 1947 and August 1973,[3] St Athan was also home for the Administrative Apprentice Training School, which provided a 20-month training programme for boys who enlisted to become clerks or work in accounting, supply and administration, prior to posting to other RAF units for a 12-year term of service.[4]

RAF St Athan

RAF St Athan station crest

The station officially opened as RAF St Athan on 1 September 1938 and the first unit to take up residence was No. 4 School of Technical Training (4SofTT). In 1939, the station's activities were expanded with the arrival of a fighter group pool, the School of Air Navigation, and a maintenance unit. During the Second World War the station had over 14,000 personnel, and was used for training ground and air crew. It was linked to the aircraft storage and maintenance facility at RAF Llandow.

During the war a dummy airfield was built using wood and cardboard a few miles west of the original airfield and successful efforts were made to hide the proper field (supposedly led by Jasper Maskelyne). Aircraft and buildings were made of cardboard and wood and some real, but old tractors were driven around the site. The Germans attacked the dummy field a number of times and it was rebuilt each time. On 15 July 1940, four 250 kg bombs failed to explode, 2 of them near assembly sheds. It was unclear to the newly appointed bomb disposal team led by Colonel Stuart Archer GC whether they were dealing with delayed action fuses -then causing major disruptions to vital buildings and airfields or more likely booby trapped devices. The decision was taken to move the bombs to be detonated elsewhere.[5]

After the war, airmen of the Airframe and Engine trades continued to train at St Athan, but in 1955 this training dispersed to RAF Kirkham and RAF Weeton. 4SofTT then became a Boy Entrant School, with new recruits being trained in engine and airframe mechanics, and armament, electrical and instrument mechanics.[6] It was at this time that approval was given by the Airforce Board of the Defence Council for the formation of 2300 Sqn ATC. Following the demise of the Boy Entrant scheme in 1965, airman training returned to St Athan for the vehicle and general and Airframe, Engine aircraft maintenance trades.[7]

During the 1960s, a driving school was established. Recruits that needed to drive (RAF Police, MT (Mechanical Transport) drivers, etc.) were trained in a fleet of Morris Minors, including "Travellers", and were taught basic maintenance. The driving tests were normally taken in Cardiff and, once students had passed, they were then allowed to train in night and motorway driving, and practise on a skid-pan.[8]

St Athan also became the major RAF maintenance base for Vulcan, Victor, Buccaner, Phantom, Harrier, Tornado, Jaguar, Hawk and VC10 aircraft, originally under direct RAF control, but latterly under the auspices of the Defence Aviation Repair Agency (DARA). Highly specialised major servicing of the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight's Avro Lancaster bomber was also conducted at RAF St Athan.

In March 2003 it was confirmed that a new hi-tech maintenance centre would be built, creating 3,300 jobs. Additional jobs would be created by allowing access to the super-hangar by commercial aviation partners. Project Red Dragon would replace RAF St Athan's existing repair centre - spread out across the 1,000-acre (400 ha) site - and create a new, state-of-the-art facility.

In March 2004, however, DARA announced the loss of 550 jobs at St Athan as part of streamlining to make DARA more efficient and better able to compete with the private sector for lucrative aircraft repair contracts, but also because they lost out to a direct RAF bid for a contract to upgrade the air force's fleet of ageing Harrier jump jet aircraft.[9]

The MOD later decided that DARA's 'Fast Jets' and 'Engines' businesses would close by April 2007, although the 'Large Aircraft' business would continue[10] and, on 14 April 2005, the Project Red Dragon super-hangar opened and DARA moved its VC10 operations from its existing 'Twin Peaks' hangar into the new facility.

A 2009 report from the National Audit Office concluded that "The MOD and the Welsh Authorities did not work sufficiently closely during the project. Although they had complementary objectives, there was no common purpose between them, with the MOD interested in securing more efficient repair of fast jets and the Welsh Authorities interested in safeguarding and creating jobs in South Wales. The MOD and the Welsh Authorities did not have a shared understanding of each other’s key assumptions. The Red Dragon project highlights the danger in large and complex projects that involve multiple public bodies of insufficient openness and information sharing."[11]

RAF St Athan has been used to house a number of army units throughout its life and, in 2003, the 1st Battalion, Welsh Guards moved from Aldershot to St Athan - the first time they have been based in Wales since they were formed in 1915.[12]

In 2006, the Special Forces Support Group was raised at St Athan and the Welsh Guards returned to London. The station was renamed as MOD St Athan. A large swathe of land was acquired by the Welsh Government and commercial aircraft companies such as ATC Lasham started to operate from buildings such as the former VC10 hangars. DARA steadily drew down their Fast Jet and Engines operations, closing both by April 2007; the Large Aircraft business continued as part of the Defence Support Group (DSG) until its closure in 2012.

In 2009 building work was due to commence on a new defence training academy with its heart at St Athan. this had followed the Defence Training Review, when three companies tendered for two separate contracts, with the Metrix consortium being awarded the contract for package 1 (package 2 has since been withdrawn). The Welsh Government is now moving ahead with its original plans to create an aviation business park and has included the site in the St Athan and Cardiff Airport Enterprise Zone.[13] Recently Bruce Dickinson of Iron Maiden fame set up Cardiff Aviation Ltd.[14] in the former VC10 hangars known as Twin Peaks. In addition eCube (specialising in end of life solutions for aircraft), together with Horizon Aircraft Services[15] (formerly Hunter Flying) (MRO of military aircraft) have also taken up occupation.

The training to be carried out at St Athan was to be specialist phase 2 and phase 3 engineering courses of the Royal Navy, Army and Royal Air Force. They include those courses delivered today within the Defence Colleges of Aeronautical Engineering, Electro-Mechanical Engineering and Communications and Information Systems. Phase 2 training involves initial trade training for the armed forces; phase 3 training involves continuous professional development. In addition, some training of overseas troops in the same disciplines was to be accommodated.[16]

The new academy was claimed to create up to 5,000 jobs at St Athan with a £14 billion investment over 25 years with an estimated £57.4 million spent into the local economy. It was to accept its first intakes in 2012 and will be fully operational in 2017 when the last of the current training centres closes. However, changes in all these elements of the Plans were brought out by anti-Metrix campaigners,[17] phase 3 training was deleted with reduction to a PFI total of £11 billion, the 'academy' was downgraded to a "Defence Training College", the number of jobs was halved and most disclosed as not 'created' but transferred from other MOD sites. A principal member of the Metrix consortium (the 'blue-chip' Land Securities Trillium) withdrew, to be replaced by Sodexo. A public inquiry into compulsory purchase of land opened in January 2009 gave opportunity for local communities and Welsh organisations (Cynefin y Werin; Friends of the Earth, Cymdeithas y Cymod, Green Party) to challenge the development. The MOD and Welsh Government accepted the size was cut by more than half, but maintained their demand for the same size of estate for accommodation and support facilities. They also retained the environmentally damaging and costly approach road, though opposed strongly by local communities. Being politically sensitive, the decision on the inquiry was held up for 18 months.

The MOD continued to negotiate the project with the Metrix Consortium, but the price rose several times, reaching £14 billion in mid-2009. The decision was delayed till after the 2010 election. Then, on 19 October 2010, the DTR project was cancelled and Metrix UK lost its status as preferred bidder. On 18 July 2011, the Minister announced that RAF Lyneham would instead be used as an integrated training centre, though consultation is awaited and the logic of the new proposal is questioned.[18]

There was an intention to move No 4 School of Technical Training from St Athan to MoD Lyneham as the Army (REME) schools that are relocating there carry out similar engineering training functions; however a decision by 22 Training Group to keep the CAP badges together (RAF with RAF) seems to have changed the direction of No 4 School of Technical Training, with it now potentially moving to RAF Cosford to rationalise the Defence College of Technical Training (DCTT) training establishments, a move confirmed in an announcement by Defence Secretary Michael Fallon on 15 September 2015.[19]

The last aircraft to be serviced at DSG St Athan, a Vickers VC10, departed the site on 23 February 2012 and the last remaining employees were made redundant.[20]

On 23 February Aston Martin announced that their new factory to build its DBX crossover model would be located on the airfield at St Athan. Construction of the 90 acre site would commence in 2017, with a total investment of $280 million and the creation of 750 jobs. The factory will incorporate the Project Red Dragon super-hangar which had cost the British taxpayer £113m. The U.S. state of Alabama, along with two UK sites and a Middle Eastern location, had been on Aston’s shortlist for the factory. Aston unveiled the DBX at the 2015 Geneva Auto Show; DBX production will start in 2020 with an output of up to 5,000 units a year envisaged.[21][22][23]

Air accidents

On 26 August 1993 an ATC civilian instructor was seriously injured and the RAF Volunteer Reserve pilot, Group Captain Roger Sweatman, was killed when their Chipmunk trainer, on an air experience flight, crashed after encountering difficulties during a simulated emergency low-height manoeuvre on take-off. The pilot attempted to recover the aircraft in a reciprocal approach however it struck the roof of the engine repair and overhaul squadron hangar and crashed to the ground at the foot of the adjacent hangar. The accident was investigated by an air crash investigation team and was attributed to pilot error. Ref MOD/RAF accident Report.

Just before 1100 GMT on 11 February 2009, two Grob Tutor aircraft flying out of St Athan were involved in a mid-air collision in which two Air Training Corps cadets and their instructors, both RAF pilots, died. With the cause of the incident uncertain, three separate enquiries were undertaken, including one by the Air Accidents Investigation Branch. The AAIB investigation report, published on 3 November 2010, concluded that the two aircraft simply failed to see each other due to obstructions on the canopy structure and the relative size and lack of conspicuity of the aircraft.[24] The two cadet passengers were cousins and were named as Katie Jo Davies, 14, and Nikitta Walters, 13; the RAF pilots were named as Flying Officer Hylton Price and Flight Lieutenant Andrew Marsh.[25]

Current operational units

St Athan in media

The proximity of the BBC production facility at Roath Lock (and previously Upper Boat Studios) makes St. Athan a popular choice for location shooting, and it has appeared in such TV programmes as Torchwood, Doctor Who and Sherlock, and also in the films The Killer Elite and Mr Nice.[27][28]

References

  1. Though several gunnery ranges such as RAF Spadeadam are larger in area.
  2. "St Athan - 4 School of Technical Training". raf.mod.uk. 2014. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  3. "A History Of The Administrative Apprentice Schemes". Royal Air Force Administrative Apprentice Association. 2014. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  4. "RAF St Athan History". raf.mod.uk. 2014. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  5. "Colonel Stuart Archer, GC - obituary". Daily Telegraph. 3 May 2015. Retrieved 3 May 2015.
  6. Berryman, P. E. (1955). "Formation of a Boy Entrant School at St. Athan". St. Athan Magazine. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  7. RAF Trade Training Archived 20 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
  8. Metrix Development Overview Archived 6 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
  9. "Q & A: Dara job losses". BBC News (London: BBC). 24 March 2004. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  10. "Select Committee on Welsh Affairs: Minutes of Evidence". House of Commons. 22 May 2006. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  11. "The Red Dragon Project". National Audit Office. 27 March 2009.
  12. "St Athan beckons for soldier prince". BBC News (London: BBC). 12 September 2003. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  13. "St Athan – Cardiff Airport : Enterprise Zones". Business Wales. 2014. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  14. "Meet The Team". Cardiff Aviation. 2014. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  15. "About Us". Horizon Aircraft Services. 2014. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  16. Bob Ainsworth (22 July 2008). "RAF St. Athan". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). House of Commons. col. 1064W–1065W.
  17. "ANTI-METRIX". antimetrix.blogspot.co.uk. 2013. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  18. "Minister announces MoD to learn nothing from DTR and to press towards single site for DTT". Public and Commercial Services Union. 26 July 2011. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  19. "RAF Cosford future is safe after U-turn". Shropshire Star. 15 September 2015. p. 1.
  20. "MoD St Athan: Era ends as last VC10 aircraft leaves maintenance base". BBC News. 23 February 2012. Retrieved 3 July 2012.
  21. "Aston Martin picks UK over U.S. for new plant to build DBX crossover". Automotive News Europe. 23 February 2016.
  22. "Aston Martin picks St. Athan site in Wales for new crossover car". Reuters. 24 February 2016.
  23. "Aston Martin creates 750 jobs in St Athan". BBC News. 24 February 2016.
  24. "Report on the accident to Grob 115E Tutor, G-BYUT and Grob 115E Tutor, G-BYVN near Porthcawl, South Wales on 11 February 2009" (PDF). Air Accidents Investigation Branch. 3 November 2010. pp. 49–50. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  25. "Teenage girl pilots killed in mid-air crash 'did not see each other's planes'". Daily Mail Online. 8 January 2010. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  26. "St Athan - University of Wales Air Squadron". raf.mod.uk. 2014. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  27. Ashton, Murray (5 December 2011). "Filming in Wales with Penny Skuse". The Location Guide. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  28. Andrews, Alex (3 February 2014). "Sherlock flies by private jet in Season 3 finale". Corporate Jet Investor. Retrieved 28 November 2014.

External links

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