Aviation arrived at the
meadow in 1910, when the Mayor of Seville, Antonio Halcón, organized the First Aviation Week in Tablada, with four pilots and their respective airplanes competing in speed, take-off, turns and permanence in the air. In 1913 the Tablada hippodrome was once again the scene of aerial exhibitions, when the French pilot Tixier made three 'sensational' flights aboard the 50 hp Bleriot monoplane, reaching a speed of 115 km/h. One year later,
Colonel Vives, creator of the
Spanish Aeronautics, begins the negotiations to acquire the magnificent natural aerodrome for the benefit of the infant military aviation; and in 1915, the Seville City Council ceded the hippodrome to the State for the construction of a military
aerodrome.
Decline and Collapse The Tablada hippodrome remains active until 1931, and it seems to disappear in 1936–39 when it was absorbed by the extensions of the aerodrome. The
Spanish Civil War also played a role in its decline and closure, and a new hippodrome began to be built in 1941. As of 2025, it is completely abandoned. ==References==