High Occupancy, Utilization Rates See Increased Interest in Local Development
Today, FilmLA issued its fourth Sound Stage Production Report, updating for the year 2020 the ongoing study of occupancy and utilization of certified sound stages in Greater Los Angeles. The time period covered by this update, marked by an unprecedented global filming shut down due to COVID-19, lends special significance to its findings. As it turns out, not even a worldwide pandemic could reduce occupancy or curtail filmmaker demand for Los Angeles area sound stages.
FilmLA’s report is made possible by a unique data-sharing partnership with a select group of 13 studio partners, who by entrusting FilmLA with sensitive business information, help to bring the local production picture into clearer focus. These partners, which include the six major Hollywood studios and seven large independent operators (see attached presentation for full list), today control 3.7 million of the estimated 5.4 million square feet of certified stage space available in Los Angeles County – a total of 68 percent of the local market.
SOUND STAGE PARTNERS
Certified Stage Facilities
Certified Stages
Sq. Ft. of Certified Stage Space
Sound Stage Occupancy & Utilization
Other findings in the new report include an update on the number of projects shot on stages, broken down by project category, as well as counts of stage and backlot-based Shoot Days (SD)** tracked by FilmLA partners. For the first time, FilmLA’s stage-based project counts include breakdowns of one-hour and half-hour television series by distribution platform.
Notably, just as the total number of projects shot on partner stages declined 47.0 percent year-over-year (to 898 in 2020), total stage-based Shoot Days declined 49.7 percent (to 6,191 SD) over that same period. This is also consistent with the decline in on-location production activity previously reported by FilmLA. In 2020, FilmLA reported a 48 percent decline in on-location Shoot Days (to 18,993 SD) compared to 2019 yields.
Studio partners with access to backlots saw significantly higher levels of pandemic-era use. FilmLA found that backlot-based Shoot Days reported by study partners dropped only 15 percent from 2019 to 2020. Many studio partners reported their backlots as full, owing to the preference of many production companies to shoot scenes outdoors in controlled environments whenever possible during the pandemic.
“We predicted that we would see a high level of interest in stage and backlot use on return from LA County’s 87-day pandemic production pause. But that’s not to say it was easy for our partners to say “yes” to filming,” noted FilmLA spokesperson Philip Sokoloski. “Just as we saw with on-location filming, there were new safety-related protocols to apply, parking and people logistics to master, PPE procurement challenges and new costs to absorb. What this data really highlights is the resiliency of an industry unified in its effort to get people back to work.”
"What this data really highlights is the resiliency of an industry unified in its effort to get people back to work.”Philip Sokoloski, FilmLA
Tv Series Production - Stage & Backlot Based Shoot Days
Los Angeles is also maintaining a footing in a global race to build new sound stages and expand studio inventory. While tracking global stage development was outside the scope of its report, FilmLA Research is currently tracking fourteen new studio projects and/or studio expansions underway in Greater Los Angeles. This includes the current expansions at the Universal Studios lot and CBS Television City (“TVC 2050”), and the planned construction of new stages on the Warner Bros.’ Ranch.
If all of these projects are built, the count of certified stages in the region would increase by approximately 27 percent, and square footage by an unknown but considerable sum. FilmLA will report on these developments in future report installments.
** Stage and backlot-based production figures are supplied by studio partners. One “Shoot Day” (or “SD”) is defined as one crew’s active use of a sound stage or backlot during all or part of any given 24-hour period.
About FilmlA
FILML.A., INC® is a not-for-profit organization and the official film office of the City and County of Los Angeles, among an ever-increasing roster of local municipalities. Through expedited permit processing, comprehensive community relations, film policy analysis and other services, FilmLA works to streamline and enhance the on-location filmmaking process for communities and content creators, to ensure the Greater Los Angeles economy continues to thrive.
Integral to FilmLA’s work is ongoing research into the benefits that local filming brings to the Los Angeles region. To that end, we maintain an internal research division devoted to the production, collection and dissemination of information regarding the U.S. film production economy and global production trends.