The Scotsman

Glasgow’s ‘Film City’ set to mount bid to run new Leith Docks studio

● Bidders have spent two years on plans for former wave power plant

- By BRIAN FERGUSON Arts Correspond­ent

Glasgow’s biggest hub for the film and TV industries is set to mount a bid to run the vast new studio proposed for Edinburgh’s waterfront.

Film City Glasgow has been used a base for some of the biggest Scottish movies in recent years, including Sunshine on Leith, Filth, Under the Skin and Red Road.

Now its operators have revealed they have spent more than two years pursuing plans for the former Pelamis wave power plant in Leith Docks.

It was interested in taking on the building even before it was deployed for the Avengers: Infinity War blockbuste­r, paving the way for it to be backed by the Scottish Government as the preferred site for a permanent “world class” facility.

Director Tiernan Kelly said he had even accompanie­d Oscar-winning director Danny Boyle on a tour of the site when it was in the running to be used for T2 Trainspott­ing.

Around £3.5 million was spent converting the historic Govan Town Hall into a major industry hub after the idea of creating a “film city” in Glasgow was pursued by one of Scotland’s leading producers.

Gillian Berrie, whose credits include Outlaw King, Starred Up, Hallam Foe, Perfect Sense and Under the Skin, has already thrown her weight behind the transforma­tion of theleith warehousec­omplex.

Screen Scotland, the new government-funded industry

0 Avengers: Infinity War used the former Pelamis wave warehouse in Leith during filming in Edinburgh

body, has launched a worldwide search for an operator of the venture. It is hoped up to 160,000 sq ft of studio space will be available, including five sound stages up to 100 ft tall.

Kelly revealed Film City Glasgow’s interest in the building at a creative industries summitined­inburgh,whichheard concerns that the tender timetable proposed by Screen Scotland will be “almost impossible” for potential operators to meet. Finals bids must be lodged by 1 February.

Kelly said he had “renewed optimism” that Screen Scotland would help deliver new screen infrastruc­ture.

He added: “We’re very interested in it [the Pelamis building]. We were working with Edinburgh City Council in

2016, pre-avengers, and spent a bit of money on scoping work on it. We walked around the site with Danny Boyle when he was looking to film T2 and couldn’t get it over the line.

“It’s a great asset and it’s got great potential. We’re going to look at it. We’d have liked a bit longer to work on it.

“From a selfish point of view, we’ve been all over it for two years, so we’ve perhaps got a head start in getting our heads around all the numbers and plans for the building.

“For someone coming in cold it’s a very quick turn-around. I know people have been working on it since last November. A hell of a lot of thought and work has gone into it.”

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PICTURE: PA

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