The airport covers an area of 2,921 acres (1,182 ha) which contains two asphalt and concreterunways: 14/32 measuring 10,000 by 200 feet (3,048 m × 61 m)[2] and 5/23 measuring 7,000 by 200 feet (2,134 m × 61 m).
The airport was lightly used for air traffic in lieu of the nearby Francis S. Gabreski Airport. Its last remaining air client, Skydive Long Island, closed permanently in 2015.[5]
In 2021, The Town Board of Riverhead approved the airport to be the venue of Division 1 National Hot Rod Association (NHRA) drag racing events.[6][7] The airport held inaugural NHRA drag racing events in summer 2021.[8]
In 1996, the wreckage of TWA Flight 800, which had exploded, disintegrated and crashed about 20 miles (32 km) south of the airport, was reconstructed in a hangar and is stored by the NTSB to be used as an accident investigation teaching aid. By the end of 2021, as it is now considered technically obsolete and in respect of the crash victims' families, the wreckage was dismantled, and almost all salvaged parts of the wrecked Boeing 747-131 had been recycled or sent in landfills or scrapped.
In September 1998, the bulk of the developed land, 2,640 acres (1,070 ha), at the airport was donated to Riverhead. Another 2,935 acres (1,188 ha) was donated to the New York Department of Environmental Conservation for wildlife management.
In the 1998 transactions, East End Aircraft Long Island Corporation was given 10 acres (40,000 m2) on Highway 25 which it is developing into the Grumman Memorial Park[9] and Aerospace Museum.
As of January 2006, the Navy still owns 358 acres (mostly areas requiring environment cleanup) at the site.[10]
In January 2013, one of the Calverton airport's two runways was being used to store thousands of flood-damaged vehicles from Hurricane Sandy.[11]
Development efforts
Development for the central portion of the complex is still undecided as of March 2018. Various proposals have included building a 35-story artificial ski mountain, a racing track, a plant to build solar-powered planes, building a solar farm and building a large shopping center.
In January 2008, the Riverhead Town Board approved the sale of the airport for $155 million to Riverhead Resorts which planned a 35-story ski mountain in a proposed $2.2 billion project.[12] In 2010 Riverhead cancelled the contract after Resorts did not make a $3.9 million payment.[13]
In 2017, a tentative deal was struck with the Town of Riverhead and Calverton Aviation and Technology (a joint venture with Luminati Aerospace and shopping mall developer Triple Five Real Estate I, LLC) to build solar power aircraft at EPCAL with Luminati initially saying it would employ 2,000 at the plant. Luminati Aerospace obtained tenancy at EPCAL in 2015, via the vacated Skydive Long Island space. As the plans to build planes fell into financial difficulties, the shopping mall developers were signed on to the deal.[16] The full details of the project were still being discussed in 2018. In February 2018, Sustainable Power Group filed suit, saying it offered a higher bid for the property so it could become a solar farm.[17][18]
NHRA membership and events
In early 2021, The Town Board of Riverhead voted to approve the airport to host drag racing events for National Hot Rod Association (NHRA) Division 1 events, with the first events taking place in summer 2021 with Town Supervisor Yvette Aguiar driving a race car to "cut" through the ribbon in the inaugural ceremony.[6][7][8][19] The event ended a 17-year hiatus of drag racing on Long Island and will host NHRA events approximately five times per year, in addition to non-NHRA town-sanctioned events dubbed the EPCAL Racing Series, as of 2022.[20][21]
In 2022, The Town of Riverhead again voted to approve racing events at the airport for upcoming seasons.[22]