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Where was Fantastic Four filmed

Fantastic Four

Year: 2005

Genre: Action, Adventure, Fantasy

Country: Canada

Fantastic Four was filmed in Vancouver in Canada.

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Locations

  • BC Place Stadium

    In movie

    Scene where

    Real

    Scene was shot A large stadium in Vancouver’s downtown, BC Place originally opened in 1983 and featured an inflatable roof. After the roof was torn and deflated in 2007, the stadium was renovated and a retractable roof was installed (those tall columns above the building support the new roof).

  • Battery Park

    In movie

    Scene where exterior moments set in Lower Manhattan, using the park’s waterfront setting to establish the city and provide open-space staging for dialogue and movement shots that benefit from recognizable harbor-facing backgrounds.

    Real

    Scene was shot a waterfront public park at the southern tip of Manhattan, known for open promenades, lawns, memorials, and clear views toward New York Harbor and the Statue of Liberty. Because it offers both greenery and skyline/water backgrounds, it is frequently used for exterior scenes needing an unmistakable Lower Manhattan location.

  • Baxter Building

    In movie

    Scene where The exterior of the Marine building is used as the fictional Baxter Building in New York City

    Real

    Scene was shot An Art Deco skyscraper built in 1930 which was the tallest building in the British Empire when it opened. A Vancouver heritage building.

  • Broadway & East 21st Street (Newsstand area)

    In movie

    Scene where a street-side beat staged around a newsstand location along Broadway near East 21st Street, used for character interaction and coverage in a recognizable Midtown South/Flatiron-style streetscape that reads immediately as Manhattan.

    Real

    Scene was shot a busy Flatiron/Gramercy corridor where Broadway cuts diagonally across Manhattan’s street grid, creating wide corners and high foot traffic. The area is lined with mid-rise commercial buildings and storefronts, making it practical for street-level dialogue coverage and quick inserts like curbside stands.

  • Brooklyn Bridge

    In movie

    Scene where a major crash/action sequence presented as taking place on the bridge; production notes indicate the moment took weeks to shoot and was created using a reconstructed bridge section and extensive blue-screen work rather than filming the stunt work on the actual span.

    Real

    Scene was shot a major suspension bridge connecting Manhattan and Brooklyn, widely used as an establishing backdrop for New York-based stories. It has iconic stone towers, pedestrian and bike paths above the traffic lanes, and clear sightlines toward Lower Manhattan; the setting is heavily photographed and tightly regulated for film work.

  • Burrard Bridge

    In movie

    Scene where

    Real

    Scene was shot An Art Deco style, five-lane bridge completed in 1932 to cross False Creek and connect downtown to Kitsilano.

  • Central City

    In movie

    Scene where

    Real

    Scene was shot Surrey’s Central City development is the unique combination of university campus and shopping mall. The main mall was renovated in 2000 and the office tower housing Simon Fraser University’s Surrey campus was constructed in 2003.

  • Mountain Place

    In movie

    Scene where After the space station incident, the four stay here to recuperate and discover their powers.

    Real

    Scene was shot The Koerner University Centre opened in 1959 as UBC’s new Faculty Club and was designed by Fred Lasserre, a architecture professor. The building underwent several expansions over the years and the upper level now houses the Sage Bistro, a high-end restaurant, and the lower level, after some renovations in 2008, now houses classrooms and a small cafe.

  • Plaza of Nations

    In movie

    Scene where

    Real

    Scene was shot The Plaza of Nations is an entertainment and events complex constructed for Expo '86. The original sheltered plaza was large enough to house 4,500 people for performances and hosted a number of high-profile artists before being demolished in 2007 due to safety concerns. Currently only two of the original structures remain, the main glass building currently housing Edgewater Casino and the office building at 750 Pacific Boulevard.