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TV studio and office complex in England From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sky Studios (also known as Sky Campus) is the headquarters of satellite broadcaster Sky, and home to much of its programming output.[1] The Isleworth campus consists of nine buildings plus ancillary structures, with three of those buildings containing television studios. The site is also a playout centre for many of Sky's channels.
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Sky Campus | |
---|---|
Alternative names | Osterley TVC Sky Centre Sky News Centre |
General information | |
Status | Operational |
Type | Offices and television studios |
Address | Grant Way, Isleworth |
Country | England |
Coordinates | 51.487°N 0.327°W |
Current tenants | Sky News Sky Sports |
Construction started | 1989 |
Client | Sky |
Owner | Sky Group (Comcast) |
Design and construction | |
Architecture firm | Arup (Sky Studios) |
Quantity surveyor | Gleeds / Davis Langdon (Sky Studios) |
Main contractor | Bovis (Sky Studios) |
There are ten conventional television studios on site, alongside a number of galleries, purpose-built studios for news and sports news broadcasting, and post-production facilities.[2] A number of the studios are available for independent production companies to hire.[3]
Sky Sports, Sky Sports News and Sky News all use the studios, alongside light entertainment shows such as Thronecast, Skavlan and Harry Hill's Tea Time. Previously it has been the home of shows such as Brainiac: Science Abuse.[4]
The studios at Osterley are currently located across three main buildings.
Originally called Harlequin 1,[5] the Sky Studios building contains eight conventional studios located on the ground floor.[6]
Studios 4 and 5 can be used together or separately thanks to a soundproof double door – combined, they are 122 ft long and 5,676.3 sq ft (527.35 m2).[3] Due to the door runners, camera pedestals cannot be tracked over the studio join. Shows such as Thronecast, Skavlan and Harry Hill's Tea Time have been made in these studios.
Studios 6, 7 and 8 have dock doors which open directly onto an access road, whilst studio 5 has a dock door with a short access tunnel before another door opening out onto an access road. Studios 1, 2, 3 and 4 have scene dock doors which open out onto a scene dock.
There are also a number of non-conventional studios located elsewhere in the building.
There are six production galleries on the ground floor alongside the conventional studios, with separate sound control rooms alongside each gallery. Any studio can be controlled from any gallery. Gallery 1 has been turned into a gallery which is capable of remote production for the EFL Championship. There is also a routing, distribution and instant replay hub in Studio 2's former control room, and Studio 7's control room is split into commentary booths and associated technical equipment. Sky Sports News is broadcast from Gallery 6. Sky News have two gallery facilities, PCR 21 and PCR 22, located on the second floor alongside Studio 22, which are used to control Studio 6, Studio 21, Studio 22, Millbank and the two City Studios. There are also a number of separate production galleries for remote sports production located elsewhere in the building.
Sky 2 is currently home of Sky Creative Agency and contains two television studios: one automated and one conventional.
Both studios share a covered scene dock but have separate production galleries. Studio F's gallery is located on the second floor, with access via a gantry from the studio floor, whilst Studio G's gallery is located on the same level as the studio. The Soccer AM (and previously, Game Changers) exterior set is located next to these studios. Studio F hosted the 'Battle for Number 10' Conservative leadership programme in August 2022, with audience of around 60 people.
Sky Central is the largest building on site, and is home to a significant proportion of Sky's staff. It was completed in 2016.[11] There is one studio in this building, located on the first floor.
This studio is currently controlled from PCR 21 on the second floor of the Sky Studios building.
In addition, the atrium and mezzanine of Sky Central was used for Sky News' coverage of the 2019 United Kingdom general election.[13][14]
There are a number of buildings previously containing television studios which have now been vacated.
Built in 2004 and vacated in early 2018, with studio facilities moving to Sky Central and the Sky Studios building. Staff who previously occupied the Sky News Centre moved to a dedicated floor of the Sky Studios building.
The main Sky News gallery was, until January 2018, located behind Studio A and could regularly be seen in the background of shots, alongside Sky News' Network operations center.[16]
Parts of the building have now been modified for use as a scenery workshop.[17]
The original five studios on the site have all been demolished as of October 2019.
As of October 2019, Studio H (which became part of building Sky 7) has been demolished for the construction of the new Innovation Centre,[18][19] which also involved the demolition of the adjacent building, Sky 6.
Some productions have been broadcast from different studios, so the studios listed are the most recently used.
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