The project is funded by NMEDD as part of the statewide Media Arts Collective Initiative to grow the state's film industry. Once completed, NMSU will lease the soundstage to a company that will be responsible for operations and maintenance and will either film their own productions at the complex, or lease out the complex to other production companies, said Wayne Savage, executive director of Arrowhead Park.

The company operating the complex will be selected through a request for proposals process, or RFP, the development of which has already begun. Savage said the hope is to have a company contracted by the time the complex is completed in January 2026.

"This soundstage complex at NMSU's Arrowhead Park is a game-changer for New Mexico's film industry," said Mateo Frazier, New Mexico Media Arts Collective acting executive director. "It bridges education and professional production, creating invaluable opportunities for our students while attracting major projects to southern New Mexico. This facility embodies our vision of a thriving film and media arts ecosystem that benefits our entire state. We're excited to work with NMSU, DACC and our labor and industry partners to further establish New Mexico as a premier destination for film and television production."

Arrowhead Center Inc. will manage the development of the complex that will be located south of DACC's Creative Media Technology building at Arrowhead Park, and near the location of the proposed NMSU Creative Media Institute building. All three buildings will be among the components that form the Las Cruces Creative Campus envisioned by Kevin Boberg, Ph.D., Arrowhead Center's first director and CEO and former NMSU vice president for economic development who passed away in 2021.

"Dr. Boberg was a strong believer in this colocation idea to benefit students, research and industry," Savage said. "This will bring lots of opportunities for students when they graduate, as well as have a significant economic impact on the community."

Savage said the soundstage complex is expected to create 200 new, full-time jobs and help increase the local film crew base that regularly works on film and television productions in the area. The complex has the potential to attract a TV series that will spend between $12 million to $15 million over a six-month period for food, lodging and other services. A mid-sized film project has the potential to spend about $4 million over two months.

"The soundstage will be a real game-changer for southern New Mexico," said filmmaker Ross Marks, executive director of the Las Cruces International Film Festival and professor in NMSU's Creative Media Institute. "It will finally even the playing the field for us to attract film and television productions. It will be a full-service stage with all the amenities needed to attract everything from big studio shows to small independent films. I personally look forward to using it for several of my future projects. I know our students will benefit from all the internship opportunities the new stage will provide."

The agreement between NMSU, Arrowhead Center Inc. and NMEDD is for a total of 12 years, including the two-year development phase and a 10-year operations phase, after which NMSU can decide whether to continue with operation of the complex as a soundstage or convert it to serve other purposes.

Savage said the targeted groundbreaking date is sometime in the first quarter of 2025.


The full article can be seen at https://newsroom.nmsu.edu/news/planned-soundstage-at-nmsu-expected-to-significantly-boost-local--state-economies/s/b7164fa9-a703-4395-9e5e-5ee4cf751a63