It is built on the northern section of the former site of the
Royal Aerospace Establishment Bedford, a
former Royal Air Force airfield and took five years to convert to a track using the latest in track-laying techniques to provide a quiet and smooth surface. It was designed to be driven by high performance road cars and as such has larger than usual run off areas and does not have sections of
Armco safety barriers which would potentially damage a car seriously if it left the track. Because the track has no
Armco it is not eligible to hold races there or have an area for spectators due to the inability to ensure their safety. Bedford Autodrome was used as an official training site for the
2012 Summer Olympics and
Paralympics. Sections of the main and secondary runways at the aerodrome were utilised for vehicle storage in relation to the UK
vehicle scrappage scheme that ran between 2009 and 2010. A petition to the UK Government requesting allowance for recommissioning and resale of classic vehicles from this stockpile was submitted in March 2016, but ultimately rejected. ==Use as an airfield==