With the facility released from military control, civilian flying returned to Christchurch. The Christchurch Aero Club operated from the north side while on the southwestern tip of the field the RAF's 622 Gliding School operated for many years from a hangar just outside the airfield boundary. In 1954, the Military Experimental Engineering Establishment from Christchurch laid a Tarmac runway on the site of the World War II wire and PSP (pierced steel planking) runway. The main beneficiaries of this exercise was the
De Havilland factory which was producing
Vampire,
Venom,
Sea Venom and
Sea Vixen jet fighters and the
Airspeed Ambassador twin piston-engined airliners. Following the closure of De Havilland factory in 1962, the use of the airfield rapidly declined. The staffed air traffic control tower was closed in July 1963 and the Aero Club closed in 1964. The airfield officially closed at the end of 1964, although the occasional aircraft used the airfield until around 1974. Today, the airfield site has been developed by the urban areas of Somerford/
Mudeford. It is now a mix of housing and industry with nothing remaining of the airfield except some of the Airspeed buildings and streets named after aircraft. ==References==