copy and paste this google map to your website or blog!
Press copy button and paste into your blog or website.
(Please switch to 'HTML' mode when posting into your blog. Examples: WordPress Example, Blogger Example)
Warner Bros. Studios Leavesden - Wikipedia In 2010, as the final Harry Potter film was nearing completion, Warner Bros announced their intention to purchase the studio as a permanent European base, the first studio to do so since Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in the 1940s
History of Leavesden Studios - theStudioTour. com As Pinewood Studios was all booked up, as well as designing the sets, Lamont was given the task of building an entire film studio to house them, utilising the 1 million square foot floor area of the former Rolls Royce factory at Leavesden Aerodrome
Our History - The Studios Warner Bros Studios Leavesden is officially opened by the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge – almost twenty years after the site was converted from aerodrome to film studios, and over a year since the completion of the refurbished studios
Warner Bros. Studios, Leavesden - TV Studio History The first series had been made the year before in a similar very large converted industrial shed in a village a few miles from here called Park Street Studios As it happens, that facility had previously been used by another Bond movie – Tomorrow Never Dies
Warner Bros. Studio, Leavesden - warnerbros. fandom. com Leavesden Aerodrome was a British airfield created in 1940 by the de Havilland Aircraft Company the Air Ministry in the tiny village of Leavesden, between Watford and Abbots Langley, in Hertfordshire Construction began in 1940 after the outbreak of World War II
A brief history of the Warner Bros Studios in. . . | Pixxcell Leavesden Aerodrome was constructed in 1939, after the outbreak of World War II, by the De Havilland company who were responsible for producing what would become known as the Mosquito fighter craft and the Halifax bomber
Leavesden - Airfields of Britain Conservation Trust UK Best known now as the home of Warner Bros, where parts of the Harry Potter movies were filmed, the site for Leavesden airfield was purchased as a factory for aircraft production in 1940 The premises were leased to two organisations: London Aircraft Production Group and The Second Aircraft Group
Warner Bros. Studios Leavesden Explained Leavesden Studios, as the site was rebranded by its owners, quickly became popular after filming of GoldenEye was completed A succession of major feature films made use of the site; in 1997, the first of the Star Wars prequels, The Phantom Menace, and later Tim Burton 's Sleepy Hollow
Leavesden Studios and the Ingratitude to James Bond The official web page of the Leavesden Studios, known since 2010 as the Warner Bros Leavesden Studios, details the story of the complex since the 1940s, when the land belonged to the Ministry of Defence and served as an aerodrome for the Mosquito and Halifax combat aircraft during World War II