Buffy the Vampire Slayer was filmed in Los Angeles in the United States of America.
Fire Station 23
In movie
Real
Six Flags Magic Mountain
In movie
Real
Delmar T Oviatt Library (CSU Northridge)
In movie
Real
Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County (Exposition Park)
In movie
Real
Scene was shot L.A.'s Natural History Museum if the largest museum of its type on the west coast containing over 35 million artifacts and specimens including an extensive research collection. The museum opened in 1913 designed in the Beaux Arts style and was expanded over the years in a variety of different styles including Neoclassical, Romanesque, and Spanish Plateresque.
Los Angeles
Ennis House
In movie
Scene where Where Angel lives for a while.
Real
Scene was shot Designed by Frank Lloyd Wright and built in 1924 for retailer Charles Ennis. The distinctive exterior of the building is constructed from 27,000 patterned granite blocks decorated in a Mayan revival style. The house was first used for filming only six years later in Female and has been used regularly ever since.
Los Angeles
Disney's Golden Oak Ranch
In movie
Real
Scene was shot Constructed on land purchased by Walt Disney in 1959, Golden Oak Ranch is a 890-acre movie ranch located at the entrance of Placerita Canyon to the east of Santa Clarita. The ranch contains suburban & downtown backlots as well as a variety of cabins and outdoor areas for filming.
Newhall
Merry-Go-Round (Griffith Park)
In movie
Real
Scene was shot The Merry-Go-Round was constructed in 1926 in San Diego and was moved into Griffith Park in 1937 by the Davis Family. The carousel contains 68 lavishly decorated horses and is the only remaining four-abreast carousel from the Spillman Engineering Company in the world. At the center of the merry-go-round is a Stinson 165 Military Band Organ with a repertoire of over 1500 songs. It was at this carousel where Walt Disney first thought up the idea of Disneyland while watching his daughters ride.
Los Angeles
Vasquez Rocks
In movie
Real
Scene was shot A nearly 1000-acre park located north of Los Angeles with distinctive uplifted rock formations. The distinctive look and location within the Thirty-mile zone have made the rocks an extremely popular filming location since it first appeared in Werewolf in London back in 1935.
Los Angeles