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Louisiana film tax credits may not be enough as Texas announces two major film studios
Posted by MrLSU on 6/6/22 at 8:21 pm23
Bizjournal: 'Project Dark Monday,' a $267M, 820,000-square-foot film studio, to be considered for incentives in San Marcos
"Another massive film studio project could rise in the Austin area.
The San Marcos City Council on June 7 will meet to discuss potential incentives for an 820,000-square-foot "state-of-the-art motion picture studio facility" at 6202 West Centerpoint Road in the La Cima master-planned development. Public documents indicate the project could include 12 sound stages, four workshops, backlots, production offices and a commissary.
Hill Country Studios, a subsidiary of Hill Country Group LLC, has proposed building the studio on 75 acres of a 209-acre-plot in three phases, starting in April 2023 and completing everything by 2025, according to council documents. Phase 1A would include seven production stages, two workshops and a welcome center, while Phase 1B would include 250,000 square feet of office space. Phase 2 would include five additional stages, two workshops and support space.
The San Marcos project has an estimated capital investment of $267 million and would employ at least 44 people with an average salary of $100,000. Additionally, officials estimated that the project would result in the employment of 1,400 contract workers with an average of 1,200 on production projects at an $80,000 average salary.
The project would mark the second known massive film project in the Austin suburbs. The Bastrop 552 project, which owner Alton Butler has said will eventually have 486,000 square feet of studio space, 300,000 square feet of warehouse/mill space and 200,000 square feet of office space in a horseshoe bend of the Colorado River, remains on track to open on 546 acres near the city of Bastrop in August 2023.
"Another massive film studio project could rise in the Austin area.
The San Marcos City Council on June 7 will meet to discuss potential incentives for an 820,000-square-foot "state-of-the-art motion picture studio facility" at 6202 West Centerpoint Road in the La Cima master-planned development. Public documents indicate the project could include 12 sound stages, four workshops, backlots, production offices and a commissary.
Hill Country Studios, a subsidiary of Hill Country Group LLC, has proposed building the studio on 75 acres of a 209-acre-plot in three phases, starting in April 2023 and completing everything by 2025, according to council documents. Phase 1A would include seven production stages, two workshops and a welcome center, while Phase 1B would include 250,000 square feet of office space. Phase 2 would include five additional stages, two workshops and support space.
The San Marcos project has an estimated capital investment of $267 million and would employ at least 44 people with an average salary of $100,000. Additionally, officials estimated that the project would result in the employment of 1,400 contract workers with an average of 1,200 on production projects at an $80,000 average salary.
The project would mark the second known massive film project in the Austin suburbs. The Bastrop 552 project, which owner Alton Butler has said will eventually have 486,000 square feet of studio space, 300,000 square feet of warehouse/mill space and 200,000 square feet of office space in a horseshoe bend of the Colorado River, remains on track to open on 546 acres near the city of Bastrop in August 2023.
re: Louisiana film tax credits may not be enough as Texas announces two major film studiosPosted by back9Tiger on 6/6/22 at 8:22 pm to MrLSU
Texas has its sites on taking over everything. We need to politick for them to take over Louisiana while we still have something to offer.
This post was edited on 6/6 at 8:23 pm
re: Louisiana film tax credits may not be enough as Texas announces two major film studiosPosted by dawgfan24348 on 6/6/22 at 8:24 pm to back9Tiger
Will be interesting if Texas can take business away from Georgia. Right now Atlanta is essentially east Hollywood with The Walking Dead, Stranger Things, the Fast and Furious movies, MCU movies being filmed here. Is definitely cool because I’m always getting emails about casting calls for extras
re: Louisiana film tax credits may not be enough as Texas announces two major film studiosPosted by fallguy_1978 on 6/6/22 at 8:24 pm to MrLSU
Adios hill country
re: Louisiana film tax credits may not be enough as Texas announces two major film studiosPosted by theone on 6/6/22 at 8:28 pm to back9Tiger
quote:
Texas has its sites on taking over everything. We need to politick for them to take over Louisiana while we still have something to offer.
What’s to offer?
quote:
quote:
Texas has its sites on taking over everything. We need to politick for them to take over Louisiana while we still have something to offer.
What’s to offer?
We can offer terrific film locations for 3rd world war zones. Sierra Leone, Somalia, Uzbekistan, Syria, Honduras, Albania--no reason to travel to those exotic film locations when Louisiana offers these sites with real life bullets.
We can also offer them Bawville.
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re: Louisiana film tax credits may not be enough as Texas announces two major film studiosPosted by BuckyCheese on 6/6/22 at 8:41 pm to DesScorp
quote:
Texans are going to regret this. Real Texans, anyway.
Yep.
Bringing loads of Californian businesses into Texas will bring loads of leftoids along with them.
re: Louisiana film tax credits may not be enough as Texas announces two major film studiosPosted by dawgfan24348 on 6/6/22 at 8:48 pm to DesScorp
Yes brining in money and jobs is bad because reasons
re: Louisiana film tax credits may not be enough as Texas announces two major film studiosPosted by DomincDecoco on 6/6/22 at 8:53 pm to MrLSU
Its Bass-trop
not Basstrup
not Basstrup
re: Louisiana film tax credits may not be enough as Texas announces two major film studiosPosted by Coach Buzzcut on 6/6/22 at 8:53 pm to soccerfüt
LA film tax credits and incentives is about to sunset in a couple of years, and last year a bill to extend the tax credits failed in the house
re: Louisiana film tax credits may not be enough as Texas announces two major film studiosPosted by BeachDude022 on 6/6/22 at 9:22 pm to patnuh
quote:
Maybe Texas can just buy Louisiana
Ew no. That would be like adding a gangrene limb to your body
Louisiana politicians f’d this up just like they do everything else. They were #1 in film production like 10-15 years ago until some loser politician decided Louisiana was better off not reaping billions of dollars of economic impact in exchange for a few million in tax incentives. Georgia took over and now Texas is going to as well. Louisiana is too far behind now to compete.
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