Converted 'technical and domestic site' of RAF Lindholme an 'expansion period' (1930s) bomber station used during WWII for the training of Lancaster crews. The site is complete in plan form and includes control tower, 5 'Type-C' hangars, barrack blocks (converted 1985 from dormitory to single cell accommodation), Headquarters and officers mess buildings (Interpretation based on likeness to plans of Cranfield and Feltwell in Dobinson 2000, 137) . Adjacent but separately polygonised are a number of streets of 'Airmen's Married Quarters' in the form of semi-detached housing. The site was transferred in 1985 to the prison service and formed the basis of HMP Lindholme. This area of the prison has since been reused as a controversial 'Immigration Removal Centre'. Before its construction the area of RAF Lindholme was surveyed drained farmland analogous to that described as HSY4403 and created from the former raised mire of Hatfield Moor as part of the 1825 award of the 1811 Hatfield Thorne, Fishlake, Stainforth and Sykehouse Enclosure Act (Haywood 1825). No legibility of pre-airfield landscape within this area but an important survival of a WWII airfield.