The Columbus Dispatch

Eyeing growth for Ohio’s film industry

Fallback Studios aims to make region a moviemakin­g destinatio­n

- Donovan Hunt Columbus Dispatch | USA TODAY NETWORK

Amotion picture company hopes to make Ohio a filmmaking destinatio­n with a building it’s renovating into a film studio in Dublin. ● Fallback Studios, a film production company, has agreed to purchase a 250,000 square foot building on a 15 acre campus with five stages, a 4k theater, post production studios, an LED volume wall for virtual production, a full-service production company, podcast spaces and more, according to a Fallback news release. This would be the largest production facility in Ohio.

The facility, which Fallback has a purchase agreement grow the Ohio film industry and keep Ohio film and for October, is at 7007 Discovery Blvd. It is the production students in the state rather than working current headquarte­rs of WD Partners, a retail consulting on the coasts that have large film industries. and architectu­re company, that will continue Fallback itself said it will hire 21 employees in a to lease part of the building. year and 49 by 2031.

It will support the creation of feature films, independen­t Kale said that Ohio’s film industry is worth about films, live audience shows, music videos, $300 million and the goal is to grow it to it to $3 billion documentar­ies, podcasts and other kinds of projects. in the next five years. The facility will be used by Fallback for their He said the two things that can make that happen own production­s or can be leased out to companies are infrastruc­ture and support from the state and local working on other projects. government in the form of incentives that have

Fallback Studios estimates it will spend $20 million grown other state’s film industries, like Georgia. to renovate the existing building. It partnered with Film Columbus, a non-profit focused

Kevin Kale, CEO and chairman of Fallback, said on growing the Ohio film industry, to discuss the studio plans to open phase one of the facility in these topics. John Daugherty, director of Film Columbus, the second quarter of 2025. He said the first phase said one of the problems with projects being includes parts that do not require much constructi­on filmed in Ohio is production­s will arrive with their like the podcast studios, post-production own crews — only hiring a few people from Ohio — spaces, educationa­l suites in collaborat­ion with local and leave when they wrap, not giving much to Ohio universiti­es and the theater. workers.

“The expectatio­n is as we move into and go He said building up an Ohio crew base is a chicken through 2025, that you’ll see several projects that and the egg problem. will either come out of the facility or that the production Few projects coming to Ohio means fewer Ohio company is investing in,” Kale said. workers with production experience and few workers with production experience makes coming to Ohio less attractive.

Economic impact

Kale said the facility project aims to create jobs,

Having a center people can work at can help build that crew base, he said.

Dublin council supports the project

At Dublin City Council’s July 1 meeting, it approved a $240,000 incentive package to help Fallback’s project. It has a seven-year 18% performanc­e incentive on withholdin­gs totaling up to $120,000, a $60,000 solar installati­on grant and up to $60,000 for the Dublink fiber lateral grant, according to a Dublin news release.

Kale said Fallback was considerin­g many places but a large reason it decided on Dublin was because of local government support.

Dublin said these building improvemen­ts align with its goals of sustainabi­lity and digital connectivi­ty.

“We’re very excited by the many opportunit­ies Fallback Studios will bring to Dublin,” Economic Developmen­t Administra­tor Kirby Dearth said in an emailed statement. “They’ll be able to well position the City in the global production industry and attract a host of partnered companies to Dublin. This will have a significan­t positive impact on our local economy, including new jobs, travel and tourism and our many amenities.”

It’s all about the tax incentives

Daugherty, who has lobbied to increase Ohio’s film tax incentive, said one of the key elements to growing a state’s film industry is how large its film tax credit is. Film projects in Ohio can apply for the Ohio Motion Picture Tax Credit that gives a 30% refund on production cast, crew wages and other instate spending, according to the Ohio Department of Developmen­t.

Ohio started its tax credit with a maximum amount of $20 million a year in 2009 and it has since grown to $50 million. Georgia, for example, has grown one of the largest film industries in America with large studios in Atlanta and an uncapped tax credit.

Fallback’s facility project was supported by a new infrastruc­ture tax incentive for film facilities. If infrastruc­ture incentives are unused, the tax motion picture credit will get the money meaning at its largest it could be $75 million a year.

Kale said creating the infrastruc­ture with this large project will hopefully convince lawmakers to increase the credit and incentiviz­e more projects in the state.

“The strategy is, hey, if legislator­s see that somebody’s planting a flag right here in Ohio and they’re creating an atmosphere where people want to move here, people want to stay here that are graduating ... Then the legislator­s are most likely going to look at that and say ‘ok, we can incentiviz­e this a little more,” Daugherty said.

 ?? PROVIDED BY FALLBACK STUDIOS ?? This drawing shows the Fallback Studios facility in Dublin with its signage. The building currently exists there but is the headquarte­rs of retail consulting and architectu­re company WD Partners
PROVIDED BY FALLBACK STUDIOS This drawing shows the Fallback Studios facility in Dublin with its signage. The building currently exists there but is the headquarte­rs of retail consulting and architectu­re company WD Partners

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