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George Lucas' Planned Filmmaking Megaplex Has Marin Residents Fearing The Dark Side

George Lucas

First Posted: 01/23/2012 5:28 pm Updated: 01/23/2012 5:28 pm

While the sleepy Marin County hamlet of Lucas Valley went by that name long before George Lucas moved in, the neighborhood has become synonymous with the iconic director/producer in the years since he built his Skywalker Ranch "filmmakers' retreat" there in the late 1970s.

Now, as Lucas looks to expand his presence in the valley with the construction of a massive production studio, area neighbors are increasingly seeing his plans as a phantom menace.

At issue is Lucas's intention to convert Grady Ranch into a state-of-the-art production complex housing everything from multiple indoor and outdoor sound stages, a daycare center, a restaurant, a gym, a bevvy of screening rooms, 20 overnight guest suites, parking for over 200 automobiles and a "wine cave" to store products from Lucas's vineyards.

Not only will the facilities at Grady Ranch be closed to the general public, but it will also be almost completely hidden from view by the construction of a man-made hill.

Lucas won unanimous approval for the project from the Marin County Board of Superiors in 1996; however, the designs have been significantly scaled back from what was initially allowed. The most recent plans include the preservation of over 3,000 acres of open space.

"Grady Ranch will be a cutting-edge digital media production facility for both movies and television. As we complete this final phase of the approved master plan, we remain committed to continuing our extensive history of preservation and of bringing long-term benefits to the Marin community," Lucasfilm publicist Emilie Nicks told the Marin independent Journal in a statement. "In addition to meeting all the requirements outlined in the approved master plan, we've also made significant, positive improvements to the Grady Ranch Precise Development Plan, above and beyond what was required."

Those concessions haven't been enough to pacify neighbors, who note the area is only zoned for house and agriculture. Local critics also claim that Lucas's widening footprint in the bucolic bedroom community would bring an excess amount of unwanted traffic.

CBS San Francisco reports:

"It may turn into a winery. They may have sort of an amusement park, it could morph into many different things," said neighbor Janice Warren.

"I think that they justified it because it was 'jobs, jobs, jobs,' which justifies almost anything these days," added Joy Dahlgren, who also lives nearby.

Even though Lucas is closely associated the nearby Skywalker Ranch, neither that nor the Grady Ranch facility will be the headquarters of his cinematic empire--Lucasfilm, Industrial Light & Magic and LucasArts are all based at the Letterman Digital Arts Center in San Francisco's Presidio.

At the same time Lucas is expanding his footprint around the Bay Area, he's simultaneously scaling back his own personal cinematic ambitions. In a recent interview with the New York Times, Lucas said, "I'm retiring. I'm moving away from the business, from the company, from all this kind of [big-budget Hollywood] stuff." Instead, Lucas pledged to return to the more personal, art films of his youth.

Granted, he did tell Times writer Bryan Curtis that his imminent retirement from epic, commercial fare doesn't preclude him from making just one more Indiana Jones flick.

The Grady Ranch project is slated to be vetted by the Marin County Planning Commission in late February.

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09:31 PM on 02/08/2012
Citizens should be able to count on their government to not go back on their word and retroactively ban something. What if it was your land, and your house and you wanted to build that wine cellar you'd been planning for 15 years? Granted this is a much bigger project, and I realize there are two sides to every story, what with EIR's and new regulations and riparian rights in a drought year, etc. but let's everybody be sensible and civil - neighborly even.
05:10 PM on 02/07/2012
For those of us who live out here in this peaceful valley it's not a slam dunk just cuz "it's George". This project has not been approved so reports stating otherwise (CBS, FOX, etc) are factually incorrect. We can look forward to construction noise, light pollution at night, 24/7 production and non-stop traffic. Sure Lucas has a "nice" sensibility, (if you like Spanish Revival castles) but he's not around for ever. Nothing to stop them from selling to some large Hotel chain or media company, turning Lucas Valley into some kind of "epic" tourist destination. Disney North? cha-ching and the neighbors be damned. This land has been protected under an Open Space Preservation Act for a reason.
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chi01
11:18 AM on 01/26/2012
Go Lucas, going to be epic! Don't cry Marin residents.
07:12 PM on 01/24/2012
In 1972, the Lucas Valley Home Owner's Association (LVHA) became the first community in California to purchase the surrounding 285 acres to preserve as a natural "open space" and donated it to Marin county - this historical gift by the LVHA was commended by the 1972 Marin board of supervisors for "putting their money where their mouth is". Ironically in 1996, the "Star Wars struck" Marin county board approved the new studio project without even considering the adjacent, historical LVHA open space. What a "slap in the face" to the people of the 1972 LVHA and the Open Space movement. Build the studio somewhere else George…and “put your money where your mouth is.”
05:50 PM on 01/24/2012
looks like the campus of St Mary's College in Moraga California
http://math.stmarys-ca.edu/images/chapel.gif
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Frod43
02:05 PM on 01/24/2012
They ruined the presidio when they gave it to the hippies .....you should see it now ....trashy grounds ... graffiti....and lucas. .....that was a giveaway ...hope Marin puts a stop to his building ....
12:02 PM on 01/24/2012
He has done so much for the community. He has a very private sensibility and I can't see him trying to make this an amusement park or a zoo. We need the business and he is the guy to do it right. Say NO to Target and YES to George Lucas!!!
02:57 PM on 01/25/2012
15 hours ago ( 7:12 PM)
In 1972, the Lucas Valley Home Owner's Associatio n (LVHA) became the first community in California to purchase the surroundin g 285 acres to preserve as a natural "open space" and donated it to Marin county - this historical gift by the LVHA was commended by the 1972 Marin board of supervisor s for "putting their money where their mouth is". Ironically in 1996, the "Star Wars struck" Marin county board approved the new studio project without even considerin g the adjacent, historical LVHA open space. What a "slap in the face" to the people of the 1972 LVHA and the Open Space movement. Build the studio somewhere else George…and “put your money where your mouth is.”
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gx5000
Life's too short, be happy..
09:21 AM on 01/24/2012
I thought he was retiring ?!
09:40 PM on 01/23/2012
Please don't make any more Indiana jones movies. The last one was terrible.
10:27 PM on 01/23/2012
I agree... if he does though..... please don't cast Shia Ledouche . He has managed to ruin 2 of my childhood favorites!
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Sunwyn Ravenwood
Farewell my friends, time to go...
01:30 AM on 01/24/2012
There were 2 good ones, "Raiders" and "Last Crusade". The other 2 were terrible!