How Britain is becoming the NEW Hollywood: Labour-backed plans for sprawling film studios are popping up around the country… but Home Counties locals say they will ‘destroy’ their communities and greenbelt land_Nhy
Film studio space in the UK has nearly doubled in the past three years and is developing so quickly Britain will be only second globally to Hollywood by the end of 2025, government figures predict.
In an aim to make Britain the ‘new Hollywood’ Labour has pulled rank and are now in the process of reviewing two proposals that were blocked by local councils as it seeks to reduce planning bureaucracy for major projects.
It comes after the Prime Minister Keir Starmer promised to overhaul the planning system and back ‘the builders, not the blockers.’
The UK is already home to a host of major film studios with illustrious histories including Pinewood Studios, Elstree Studios and Warner Bros Studios Leavesden, to name a few.
Some of the biggest film franchises have used these studios with experts saying the UK has a track record of attracting the ‘world’s top talent both in front of and behind the camera’.
Elstree Studios is home to the George Lucas Stage famous for its Star Wars films, while Pinewood boasts the 007 Stage, which has been used for many of the James Bond movies.
Film and entertainment giants Warner Bros Studios own Leavesden Studios where each of the eight Harry Potter movies were filmed.
A public inquiry finished on Wednesday into the plans to build the Holyport Film Studios (pictured) after developers launched an appeal the council’s rejection of their application
MAPPED: Major film studios in and around London which has been described by industry experts as as ‘the only genuine global production hub outside of North America’
Pictured: The proposed site for the Holyport Film Studios
These iconic movies has seen the UK become a leading figure in the industry and it appears the new Labour government are keen to add the nation’s film studio portfolio.
A number of film studios have already been given the green light to begin construction including a £450m Crown Works Studios development in Sunderland, a £3 million studio in Hull led by Northern Films and Television and a £6m complex in Stirling, that is planned to be one of the largest in Scotland.
Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner has also ‘called in’ two proposals that had been rejected by local councils as a public inquiry into the plans for the Holyport Film Studios, near Maidenhead in Berkshire, finished on Wednesday.
Ms Rayner, who also holds the position of the Secretary of State for the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, will now have the final say on the proposal.
The government was recently forced to deny claims that it plans to ‘concrete over the countryside’ with its ambitious projects.
The deputy Prime Minister rejected suggestions Britain is ‘too crowded’ or that there is ‘no countryside left’, saying: ‘The vast majority of England is still very green and will remain so.’
As part of the Spring budget, the former Tory government announced a tax relief of 53% for independent films with a budget of less than £15 million, with filmmakers citing this as a ‘game-changer’ in ‘attracting more investment than ever before from international studios’.
However, hundreds of residents in the quaint Holyport, had objected to the film studio, which if built, would be one UK’s biggest film and TV studio complexes covering 106 acres of land on Gay’s Lane.
Concerns have been raised over the number of film studios already in close proximity to the village as well as possibility of undermining the local decision already made.
A CGI image of how the Holyport Film Studios would look like if the plans are pushed through by the government
A public inquiry finished on Wednesday into the plans to build the Holyport Film Studios after developers launched an appeal the council’s rejection of their application
Hundreds of residents in the picturesque Berkshire village had objected to the studio which if built would be one UK’s biggest film and TV studio complexes
Locals in Holyport have hit out against the plans with landlord of The George on the Green Jonh Sennett (left) believes it will ‘destroy the village’ while Mrs Beavans (right) said it would have a ‘big impact’
Andy Smith, spokesman for Berkshire branch of the Campaign to Protect Rural England said: ‘We hope that the government will decide to leave this decision in the hands of the local community and not seek to impose an unwanted and inappropriate development on Green Belt land, over the heads of local people and their elected representatives.’
Mrs Beavans, 64, who regularly walks her dog on the proposed site, said: ‘It will have a big impact, most of the people that live here have been living here for years and they are quite stayed in their ways. They don’t like change.
‘How many film studios do you need in one sort of area?’
One local resident, who did not want to give her name, said: ‘It’s going to kill all our wildlife. It can’t go ahead. It’s in the wrong place. I don’t know how it has gone this far.’
Landlord of local pub The George on the Green Jonh Sennett said it will ‘destroy the village’.
He said: ‘I don’t think a lot of people knows what it will mean for the area. It’s three football pitches of so called studios. It’s going to be huge.’
One 45-year-old dog walker, who lives next to the site, said: ‘It would be devastating. It is a very peaceful, old and traditional village. If you then put in a massive film studio it is just going to change the area forever.
‘This is a community village and you can’t hide it, it is going to overpower everything. It seems bizarre you can have this many film studios in such a small area.
‘Angela Rayner is ultimately deciding, so it feels like it is the luck of the draw sadly. It is completely inappropriate.’
Major UK film studios – and the movies that were made there