Los Angeles Times

Pacoima studio facility unveiled

The streaming gold rush brings a major project to a decidedly un-Hollywood area.

- By Ryan Faughnder

The rising demand for scripted shows on streaming services is having an effect in a decidedly un-Hollywood area of Los Angeles: the neighborho­od of Pacoima.

West Hollywood-based Quixote Studios — a major provider of facilities, trailers and equipment for the entertainm­ent industry — on Thursday unveiled its new $30-million facility that will provide much-needed stage space for major shoots.

The project, which sits on a 10-acre space next to a mobile home park on Glenoaks Boulevard in the northern San Fernando Valley, boasts five soundstage­s totaling 75,000 square feet, 20,000 square feet of office space and a cafe for filmmakers and crew members.

It has already attracted some high-profile business. The first show to shoot there will be Amazon Studios’ “Them: Covenant,” a horror anthology series whose exe

cutive producer is Lena Waithe of “Master of None.” The show, co-produced by Sony Pictures Television, received a two-season order from the Amazon.com owned streaming service a year ago.

Quixote Studios Chief Executive Mikel Elliott, in a phone interview this week, said the early interest bodes well for the new north Valley facility, which has been in the works for about 2 1⁄2 years.

He said the company was interested in the space partly because of the low cost of building there, compared with other areas closer to L.A.'s entertainm­ent industry. Quixote, which already had an equipment warehouse nearby on Norris Avenue, was also enticed by the potential for ample parking, often a rare luxury for L.A. production staff.

“We’re going to develop Pacoima into a production hub,” Elliott said. “That real estate was relatively affordable, and it’s an attractive location.”

Los Angeles’ status as the heart of film and TV production has been threatened for years by other states and countries that lure studios with generous incentives. States including Georgia and Louisiana have eaten into California’s share of shoots with tax credits of up to 30% and 40%, respective­ly. Furthering California’s effort to combat runaway production, the state last year extended its own film and TV tax credit program to 2025, adding five years to its lifespan. The program hands out $330 million in annual tax credits to selected production­s.

Lately, the era of “peak TV” and demand for highend production­s for tech companies such as Netflix and Amazon have been a bright spot for local shooting. On-location filming days for TV dramas in greater L.A. increased 17.3% to 842 in the second quarter of 2019 from the same period in 2018, according to a July report from FilmL.A. Television comedy shooting rose 3.2% to 485 days. Meanwhile, overall filming fell 3.9% during the quarter, driven by a steep decline in feature film shoots and commercial­s.

But despite the overall drop in production, stages in the L.A. area are working at capacity because of the rise in demand for streaming content, said Paul Audley, president of FilmL.A., the nonprofit group that handles film permits for the county. The shortage has forced production companies to use abandoned bigbox retail stores for their shoots, he said.

“A soundstage is actually designed for doing the work,” Audley said. “Having these stages allows us to plan for those larger budget projects to come back to L.A.”

Pacoima isn’t a total noman’s land for the film and television industry. The area is home to prop studios and equipment warehouses, as well as Air Hollywood, a studio used for aviation scenes, said Los Angeles City Councilwom­an Monica Rodriguez, who represents the area as part of Council District 7. Still, the new studio could provide a boost to the local economy, she said.

“We’ve had some footprint, but this significan­tly grows the [entertainm­ent] industry in our district,” she said.

Others are working to build out stage space to meet demand in the San Fernando Valley, where there’s more space to build than in Los Angeles’ traditiona­l studio locations. Pacoima-based Line 204 Studios is constructi­ng a 240,000 square-foot studio complex in Sun Valley, for example.

Elliott of Quixote, who got his start in 1992 by driving commercial photograph­ers to various shoots in a motor home, provides stage space across the L.A. River from Griffith Park, as well as three stages in West Hollywood and three more in New Orleans. Quixote has about 240 employees.

He said he’s not done expanding yet, with plans to grow his business significan­tly in Pacoima with additional stages and office space. “We’re going to double our footprint over the next three to four years.”

 ?? Jake Ross Quixote Studios ?? QUIXOTE STUDIOS’ new $30-million facility in Pacoima boasts five soundstage­s totaling 75,000 square feet, 20,000 square feet of office space and a cafe.
Jake Ross Quixote Studios QUIXOTE STUDIOS’ new $30-million facility in Pacoima boasts five soundstage­s totaling 75,000 square feet, 20,000 square feet of office space and a cafe.

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