Closures of temporary ROFs A number of the ROFs were designated
temporary, for use during the war's duration only. They closed shortly after the end of the Second World War. Other ROFs were designated
permanent and they remained open into more recent times. In 1957, a Defence
white paper led to a reorganisation of the aircraft industry, a restructuring of the
British Army and a concentration on
missile systems. A number of the
permanent ROFs closed in the late 1950s, after the end of the
Korean War. Others closed in the 1970s. The largest of these, based at the
Royal Arsenal in
Woolwich, closed in March 1967. The temporary ROFs, or ROFs which closed in the 1950s and 1970s, tended to be taken over by other government departments. Some closed ROFs and
Admiralty explosive sites, such as the
Royal Navy Propellant Factory, Caerwent, were retained by the Ministry of Defence as ammunition storage areas. Others became government industrial estates or trading estates. Others were used as
brownfield sites to build prisons or open prisons. Part of
ROF Thorp Arch became the
Boston Spa depository of the
British Library. Three of the seven hostels that served
ROF Swynnerton became a training school for
General Post Office (GPO) Telephones, which later became
British Telecom, and is now the Yarnfield Park Training and Conference Centre and run by
Accenture.
ROF Elstow was taken over by the
CEGB and became a storage depot. The site has been cleared, and became the new town of
Wixams.
Trading fund In July 1974, the Royal Ordnance Factories were set up as a
trading fund, under the
Government Trading Funds Act 1973.
Privatisation of the remaining ROFs As part of its
privatisation process in the 1980s, the UK government transferred some of the, formerly separate, research and development capability of the
Defence Research Establishments into the ROFs. Other parts of the UK's defence research and design capability were later closed down; remained with the UK
Ministry of Defence, as
Dstl; or became part of
QinetiQ. On 2 January 1985 the majority of the Royal Ordnance Factories were vested in the UK government-owned company
Royal Ordnance plc. It was bought by
British Aerospace in 1987. The
Ministry of Defence Police left most of the ROFs on or within a few years of privatisation. The small number of ROFs involved in
nuclear weapons production,
ROF Burghfield and
ROF Cardiff, were removed from ROF management and did not pass over to Royal Ordnance upon privatisation. They were transferred to the control of AWRE, which later became the
Atomic Weapons Establishment. ==See also==