Connecticut Studios

Proposed Site and Facilities

Connecticut Studios will include a total of 495,000+/- square feet of newly constructed facilities including:

  • Nine sound stages totaling approximately 175,000 square feet of space.
  • Approximately 104,000 square feet of executive offices.
  • Approximately 75,000 square feet of mill and storage facilities.
  • Sufficient space for location shooting.
  • Room for expansion as business grows.
  • A 125-room, 75,000 square-foot hotel.
  • Four restaurants occupying 30,000 square feet of space.
  • Retail building with 16,000 square feet of space.

Connecticut Studios will be a good neighbor in South Windsor

  • Connecticut Studios is a well planned and responsible project that is consistent with the town’s goals for real estate and economic development.
  • Movie studios are clean, environmentally friendly businesses.
  • Movie studios are quiet businesses with operations typically limited to Monday through Friday.
  • The studio would be a secure, self-contained facility with all parking on premise and a 24-hour security staff.
  • The studio’s close proximity to major highways will offset local traffic issues.
  • The studio would contribute to the local economy and tax base helping to keep property taxes down and will create new opportunities for local business growth and individual employment.
  • The studio will support local projects and organizations.

Archive for the ‘Economic Impact Studies’ Category

S. Windsor film studio to break ground

Friday, October 15th, 2010

Hartford Business Journal

October 15, 2010

After months of delays, Connecticut Studio LLC’s proposed $50 million studio-sound stage appears finally ready for its close-up.

General Manager Mark Miller and state, federal and local elected officials will take to the red carpet Monday for a scheduled ground breaking for the project that will add as many as 500 union construction jobs over the next 10 months, authorities say.

Gov. M. Jodi Rell, Congressman John Larson, South Windsor Mayor John Pelkey and other state and local officials will join officials from Connecticut Studios LLC for the 2 p.m. ceremony at the intersection of Route 5-John Fitch Boulevard and Chapel Road.

Funded partly with Connecticut film tax credits, the 500,000-square-foot project includes nine movie-TV sound stages, executive offices, mill and storage facilities and space for locating shooting. Plans also include a 125-room hotel, four restaurants and retail space.

The 400 to 500 construction jobs will pump $24 million in wages into the economy during the eight- to 10-month building timetable, Connecticut Studios said in a statement.

$50 million Connecticut Studios project seeks state approval to move ahead with financing

Friday, October 15th, 2010

Kory Loucks

Journal Inquirer

October 11, 2010

SOUTH WINDSOR — The push is on to get the first phase of the $50 million Connecticut Studios project started by year-end, officials have said.

Those efforts include adding the project to the town’s 2003 I-291 Corridor District Municipal Project Development Plan and obtaining approval from the state’s Office of Policy and Management under the Connecticut Environmental Protection Act, town Economic Development Coordinator Craig Stevenson said Wednesday during a Redevelopment Agency meeting at Town Hall.

“We followed all those requirements but didn’t receive approval from CEPA because there was no project,” Stevenson said.

In order to receive the green light under the environmental act and move ahead with the tax incremental financing, which is part of the complex financing package funding the project, Stevenson said that officials must update the Interstate 291 plan “and add some specificity about the Connecticut Studios project,” which the town’s bond lawyer said is important.

The tax incremental financing bonds are one part of the funding package that would pay private investors 80 percent of future property taxes, with 20 percent going to the town.

Galligan said that 100 percent of the personal property taxes would go to the town, which initially would be between $300,000 and $500,000, with a potential of more than $600,000 once the project is fully operational.

The tax incremental financing bonds would be backed by revenue from Connecticut Studios, Galligan said, with no risk to the town.

The funds raised from the bonds would go to infrastructure costs, including roads, storm water drains, and sanitary sewer lines, Galligan said.

The Connecticut Studios project is going to be rolled out in two phases, with the first phase to include four sound stages in two 40,000-square-foot buildings, a 13,575-square-foot television studio, and a 73,500-square-foot mill building on approximately 40 acres.

The second phase will include additional studios, restaurants, retail, and a 150-room hotel. Stevenson said developers have a letter of intent from a hotel.

One of the reasons for the push, Galligan said, is that crews need to break ground before new state officials are seated in January, following next month’s election.

“If they don’t get in the ground by December or January, the 20 percent construction credits for the studio” might be at risk, Galligan said.

Officials also want to get the project moving so the bonding prospectus packages can go out before Thanksgiving.

The underwriters for the bonds are Stone & Youngberg LLC, a financial services firm with headquarters in San Francisco and East Coast offices in Albany, N.Y., and Maryland, along with MuniCap Inc., a public finance consulting firm headquartered in Maryland.

Stone & Youngberg were the underwriters for the tax incremental financing bonding of the Harbor Point project in Stamford, Stevenson said.

A groundbreaking ceremony for the film studio is scheduled for 2 p.m. Monday, Oct. 18, at the Connecticut Studios site at the intersection of Route 5 and I-291.

“They like the fact that they are going to have a groundbreaking,” Galligan said of the underwriters.

Stevenson asked Redevelopment Agency members to review the amendments to the project plan and e-mail any changes to the document to him by Tuesday.

They voted unanimously to post the project plan supplement online.

Stevenson said that before the town can hold a public hearing on the amendments to the plan, they must be posted online for 35 days.

The Redevelopment Agency agreed to meet again on Tuesday, Nov. 9.

Copyright © 2010 - Journal Inquirer

Film Jobs Outpace Talent

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

Greg Bordonaro

Hartford Business Journal

May 17, 2010

Connecticut’s fledgling film industry is prepping for its much anticipated turn in the spotlight.

The state has set the stage with tax credits. Connecticut’s first studio to be built from the ground up is expected to open soon in South Windsor. But will it have the workers?

Some industry officials agree that Connecticut doesn’t yet have the union workforce to fill all the high-skill, high-pay jobs that Connecticut Studios is expected to create.

It’s a dilemma all too familiar to Andrew Gernhard. He is constantly searching for new talent for his Rocky Hill-based company Synthetic Cinema International, which has shot and produced about eight films in Connecticut since 2004.

His company, which mostly concentrates on monster flicks, employs about 40 people during the production process of a single movie. Nearly 75 percent of his crew is locally hired, but the rest are imported from nearby states.

Even though Synthetic Cinema is well known locally and receives dozens of jobs applications a week, Gernhard said it hasn’t been easy finding homegrown talent.

“It’s hard to find qualified people in Connecticut. There is not much of a workforce here yet,” Gernhard said. “We need more skilled people who have experience. Big films are bringing people in from Boston, New York and Los Angeles.”

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