Availability Expands as LA, Major Competitors Add New Stage Infrastructure
Today, FilmLA issued its sixth Sound Stage Study, updating its ongoing survey of Los Angeles area studio developments, and releasing new stage occupancy and use data for calendar year 2022.
FilmLA’s report is made possible by a unique data-sharing partnership with 17 participating studio operators, who by entrusting FilmLA with sensitive business information, help bring the local production picture into clearer focus. Participating studios, which include the six major Hollywood studios and the region’s largest independent operators (see attached presentation) together control 35 facilities and 83 percent of the estimated 6.5 million square feet of certified sound stage space available in Greater Los Angeles.
Since FilmLA’s last sound stage update in March of 2023, both the UK and Georgia have added more than one million square feet of stage inventory to their existing supply. Now comparable to Los Angeles, the UK currently has around 6.6 million square feet of stage space, with plans to add dozens of new facilities. Georgia currently has over 4 million square feet of studio space and several significant projects in various planning and expansion phases.
“Just like with trained crew, the availability of purpose-built sound stages is a factor that helps determine the attractiveness of any filming location,” observed FilmLA President Paul Audley. “Our study shows that many jurisdictions are expanding their stage infrastructure and competing
On a local level, FilmLA is tracking 18 new studio projects totaling roughly 3.5 million square feet of space in various stages of planning and development in Los Angeles. A rundown of these projects and their progress is summarized in FilmLA’s 16-slide report. harder for the business we also want to win for LA.”
"The film industry is one of our most important economic engines in the city,” said Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass. “Council President Krekorian and I fought for this industry in Sacramento by securing tax credits and our commitment continues as we do all we can to keep production in Los Angeles. Just last month, we joined local leaders on a studio lot where a major modernization is being proposed, which would help increase the availability of new and modernized soundstages on our horizon. With our collective efforts, Los Angeles is well positioned to lead production as the entertainment capital of the world."Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass
According to FilmLA’s research participants, recent studio occupancy and utilization in Los Angeles and elsewhere have decreased, as was expected. As new supporting data reveals, as fears of industry strikes began to permeate the industry in the latter part of 2022, Q4 stage occupancy fell below seasonal norms. Overall, LA area stage operators reported an average annual occupancy of 90 percent in 2022, down -3 percent from the prior year. Future FilmLA reports will show the full effect of industry disruption on LA area sound stage occupancy.
In terms of utilization, a total of 1,354 projects were filmed in 35 facilities owned by the 17 studio participants in 2022. These 1,354 projects generated a total of 10,356 stage Shoot Days, with episodic television series accounting for the largest segment of production – approximately 30 percent of all projects and two-thirds of all stage shoot days.
With the number of series episodes ordered per season declining across all segments of television (streaming, broadcast and cable), the number of Shoot Days that series generated declined by -36.4 percent between 2018 and 2022 from 10,582 to 6,901. In 2022, series Shoot Days accounted for 66 percent of all production activity, compared to approximately 73 percent in 2018.
Santa Clarita Studios, having joined as a research program participant last year, is the latest studio to have its data included in FilmLA’s sound stage study.
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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.