Warner Bros. Studio Tour London – The Making of Harry Potter
Walk-through exhibition and studio tour in Leavesden, Hertfordshire, England
This article is about the permanent Harry Potter exhibition and studio tour in Leavesden. For the travelling exhibition, see Harry Potter: The Exhibition. For the film studio where the exhibition is located at, see Warner Bros. Studios Leavesden.
Warner Bros. Studio Tour London The Making of Harry Potter
Entrance to the studio tour at Soundstage J, pictured in 2012.
Warner Bros. Studio Tour London – The Making of Harry Potter is a walk-through exhibition and studio tour in Leavesden, Hertfordshire, England, owned by Warner Bros. and operated by their Studio Tours division. It is located within Warner Bros. Studios Leavesden, which is located in Watford, southwest Hertfordshire, and houses a permanent exhibition of authentic costumes, props, and sets utilised in the production of the Harry Potter films, as well as behind-the-scenes production of visual effects. The tour is contained in Soundstages J and K, which were specially built for the attraction, and are separate from the studio's actual production facilities.
Warner Bros. Studio Tour London – The Making of Harry Potter opened to the public in 2012 and has since welcomed up to 6,000 visitors a day during peak times. TripAdvisor reported that the tour has been the highest-rated attraction worldwide every year since its inauguration.[1]
After the war, the aerodrome was purchased outright by de Havilland, who themselves had a succession of owners in the following decades but ultimately they and the site were acquired by Rolls-Royce. However, by the early 1990s, Britain's manufacturing industry was in decline and Rolls-Royce had sold their interests in the site. Unable to find a new owner, Leavesden Aerodrome was left disused and all but abandoned.[3]
Then in 1994, the production team for the James Bond film GoldenEye discovered the unoccupied Leavesden. The wide, tall and open aircraft hangars were uniquely well suited to conversion into film stages. Eon leased the site for the duration of their shoot and went about gutting the factories, turning them into stages, workshops and offices - in short a working film studio.[4] Leavesden Studios, as the site was rebranded by its owners, quickly became popular after GoldenEye wrapped. A succession of major feature films made use of the site, including the first of the Star Wars prequels, The Phantom Menace, and Tim Burton'sSleepy Hollow.
In 1999, Heyday Films leased the site for the Harry Potter films.[5] Over the following ten years, all of the Harry Potter films were made there, along with some other notable Warner Bros. productions, with the Harry Potter series eventually becoming the most successful film series in history.[6]
As the eighth and final film, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2, was nearing completion, in 2010, Warner Bros. announced their intention to purchase the studio as a permanent European base.[7] By November of that year, Warner Bros. completed its purchase of Leavesden Studios and announced plans to invest more than £100m into the site they had occupied for over ten years, rebranding it again – this time to Warner Bros. Studios Leavesden.[8][9]
As part of the redevelopment, Warner Bros. also created two new soundstages, J and K, to house a permanent public exhibition called Warner Bros. Studio Tour London – The Making of Harry Potter, creating 300 new jobs in the local area.[10] Currently, the whole attraction is dedicated to the making of Harry Potter and is now home to many of the series' sets, props and costumes. It was opened to the public in early 2012.
Creation
As early as 2001, following the success of the first film, Warner Bros. were putting plans in place to build an attraction dedicated to the series and so began storing items from the films when they were no longer being used. In 2010, as the final film was nearing completion, Warner Bros. announced they would be purchasing Leavesden Studios and work on the tour began.
Over a year since the opening of the tour (and nearly twenty years after the complex was converted from an aerodrome to film studios), the site was officially opened by the Prince William and Catherine on 26 April 2013.[15] On their royal visit, they were accompanied by Prince Harry and J. K. Rowling, author of the Harry Potter book series, who had been unable to attend the tour's grand opening the year before, amongst other guests. Several hundred beneficiaries of charities they all support were given exclusive invitations to the tour on the day of the royal visit. The royal entourage visited the tour and met many of their beneficiaries, as well as the studios, where they saw some of the props and costumes from Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight trilogy, before conducting Leavesden's royal opening.[16][17]
Tour
Each tour session typically lasts three and a half hours,[18] and the tour has the capacity to handle 6,000 visitors daily.[19] Despite Warner Bros. being the studio behind Harry Potter, the tour is not styled as a theme park because Warner Bros. sold the licence to do so to Universal Studios.[19] Instead, visitors get a chance to see up close the detail and effort that goes into a major feature film at the scale of the Harry Potter series.
Though the standard tour is self guided, allowing visitors to enjoy the tour at their own preferred pace, various guided tours are available at an additional cost. Visitors with some disabilities may find, however, that certain guided tours are available to them at no extra cost if they contact the tour in advance.[20]
A shuttle bus system for tour goers operates between Watford Junction and the Studio Tour.[22]
Expansions
Warner Bros. has continued to put on special features for the school holidays, such as Dark Arts[23] and Animal Actors,[24] at no extra cost to visitors. Some installations like the Wand Choreography Interactive and the inside of the No. 4 Privet Drive Exterior set have been so popular that they have remained after their respective features have closed.[25]
Platform 9¾
In January 2015, the attraction's first expansion was announced - a brand new Platform 9¾ section, where visitors are able to board the original carriages behind the Hogwarts Express steam engine used in the films. As with the rest of the attraction, the set was constructed and dressed by the original crew members who worked on the film - including Stuart Craig himself, who designed the new set exclusively for the tour (since these scenes in the films were actually shot on location in Kings Cross). The setup includes the steam locomotive used in the films GWR 4900 Hall class no 5972 Olton Hall (wearing Hogwarts Castle nameplates) and the British Rail Mark 1 carriage that appeared in the films, brought to life by John Richardson's special effects team. Finally a new green screen experience illustrates what working on the films is like from an actor's point of view. This section opened in late March 2015.[26]
Forbidden Forest
The attraction's Forbidden Forest expansion opened in March 2017.[27][28][29]
Gringotts Wizarding Bank
In April 2019 the Gringotts Wizarding Bank expansion opened.[30] It is the largest expansion to date, at 16,500 ft2.[31]
Professor Sprout's Greenhouse
On 1 July 2022, the Professor Sprout's Greenhouse expansion opened, as part of a new feature titled "Mandrakes and Magical Creatures".[32]
Reception
The tour was warmly received by the press in the run up to its launch. Anita Singh of The Daily Telegraph described the model of Hogwarts Castle as "the highlight" of the tour.[33]
Awards
The Warner Bros. Studio Tour London – The Making of Harry Potter has won several awards since its opening, including:
2013 UKinbound Award for Individual Attraction of the Year[37]
2012 Event Technology Silver Award for Best Use of Handheld Technology[38]
2012 UK Customer Experience Award for Best Leisure & Retail Experience[39]
2012 Group Leisure Award for Best UK Attraction[40]
The tour has also been presented with awards for its lighting design, including the 2013 IES Illumination Award of Merit[41] and 2013 Lighting Design Award for Lighting for Leisure.[42]
In addition, the tour was named one of the 'Top 10 Most Innovative Entertainment Design Projects of 2012' by the website EntertainmentDesigner.com.[43]
The Potter's residence in Godric's Hollow, as seen in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1 and Part 2. This set has now been archived with the introduction of the Greenhouse in 2022 and is no longer on display.