And, action! Filmmaking complex gets go-ahead - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 05:00 PM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

And, action! Filmmaking complex gets go-ahead

Construction on Ottawa's new filmmaking complex could begin as early as this summer, after the city's planning committee gave it the go-ahead Thursday.

Construction on $40M 'creative campus' could begin this summer

The Ottawa Film Office and TriBro Studios plan to build four sound stages as well as office space for film production, animation and training on the site of a former federal animal research centre. (Ottawa Film Office and TriBro Studios)

Construction on Ottawa's new filmmaking complex could begin as early as this summer, after the city's planning committee gave it the go-ahead Thursday.

The projectwill see four sound stages built on the Greenbelt, across Woodroffe Avenue from theNepeanSportsplex.

"It's hard to be against it really," said Bruce Harvey, Ottawa's film commissioner.

Sound stages are in short supply around the world, Harvey said, with some production companies forced to shoot in rat-infested warehouses and other dilapidated buildings.

Ottawa as a film hub? The city's film commissioner thinks so

6 years ago
Duration 0:54
Ottawa's film commissioner, Bruce Harvey, says there's a lack of sound stages world wide and the four sound stages that are planned on being built in the Greenbelt will be booked up by day one.

'A sexy building'

The 8.4-hectare property, formerly a federal animal research centre,belongs to the National Capital Commission.

The Ottawa Film Office plans tolease the land while its development partner, Toronto'sTriBroStudios, willspend about$40 million to construct the sound stages,office and work areas, turning itinto a creative campus.

The area will soon be bustling with innovation.- Catherine Callary, Ottawa Film Office

Film office chair Catherine Callary told the committee the site is ideal because it's close to both the airport and animation studios and Algonquin College.

"The area will soon be bustling with innovation," she said.

Having ahub forthe city's many production houses and film students will help raise the sector's profile, Harvey said.

Many people have no idea that successful animated showssuch as Netflix's Hildaare produced in thiscity, or that there are currently threeChristmas movies being shot in Ottawa, he said.

"Building this campus helps people in Ottawa understand how big our industry is, what we can contribute to the community. And I think it's a sexy building!" Harvey said.

'There's a buzz'

BothHarvey and Coun. Jan Harder tagged along on Mayor Jim Watson's trip to Queen's Park this week.

"There's abuzz," said Harder, who chairs the planning committee. "We're ready now."

Coun. Keith Egli, in whose ward the complex will be built, said it's about time the city took advantage of the economic opportunities the industry has to offer.

"The students who come to Algonquin, for example, can stay here when they're trained and enhance our city," he said.

The rezoning needs the final approval ofcity council, and the NCC must give its OK to other aspects of the project.