BBC Television Centre

BBC Television Centre was a television production facility in Shepherd's Bush in the London borough of Hammersmith and Fulham. It was located within walking distance of the former site of Lime Grove Studios and close to Riverside Studios. It is one of the oldest buildings in the world specially built for television production, officially opened on 29 June 1960. It closed as a BBC facility on 31 March 2013, more than 50 years after its opening.

Although most intimately connected to the colour era of the original series of Doctor Who, it has been used to record at least parts of stories of each of the first nine Doctors, except the Eighth, and has been the subject of an episode of Doctor Who Confidential directed and hosted by David Tennant.

Site history
Building commenced on Television Centre almost at the dawn of the television age in Britain. Groundbreaking was in 1951, and the building was officially opened in 1960. At the time it was possessed of a highly innovative design that allowed all its studios to be essentially interchangeable. Even the exterior was remarkable, as it deliberately formed the shape of a question mark.

The first Doctor Who episodes to be recorded in Television Centre's studio space were "The Warriors of Death" and "The Bride of Sacrifice", the second and third episodes of the First Doctor serial The Aztecs, which were shot in Studio TC3 in May 1964. After principally taping at Lime Grove and Riverside in the show's early years, Television Centre became the new primary home of Doctor Who's studio recording beginning with the second episode of the Second Doctor serial The Space Pirates, shot in February 1969, although episode 2 was unusually shot on 35mm film, rather than on videotape, which was how the remaining episodes of the serial were recorded that March. The final Doctor Who story to contain major studio recording at Television Centre was the Seventh Doctor serial Ghost Light, taped in Studio TC3 in July and August 1989.

Numerous upgrades to the site allowed it to maintain its utility as a producer of drama into the 1990s. However, as the whole basis of the design had assumed multi-camera, video recording, TV Centre suddenly became useless when most dramas switched to single camera set-ups. The BBC Wales version of Doctor Who, for instance, simply could not be filmed at Television Centre due to this inherent design element. In the mid-1990s, it switched its focus from drama to news and other forms of non-fictional entertainment that still use multiple cameras.

Subsequent to the original run of Doctor Who, studio filming of the 1996 Doctor Who movie took place on a sound stage in Burnaby, British Columbia in January and February 1996, while the Unit Q2 warehouse in Newport became the 2005 series' studio space from August 2004 when production resumed in the United Kingdom after a fifteen-year hiatus.

Although Television Centre was never used as a primary filming location for BBC Wales Doctor Who, in October 2004, Studio TC4 was used to film an insert of a fake episode of Blue Peter on Television Centre's Blue Peter set specifically for the purposes of the 2005 Ninth Doctor episode Aliens of London. (The Complete History, volume 49)

A 2007 assessment determined that, even with the change of emphasis, the facilities were still under-used. As a result, a decision was taken to sell off the property in an effort to make better use of the BBC's assets.

On 16 July 2012, it was announced that Centre was sold to Stanhope plc for around 200 million pounds. The building was closed as a BBC-owned facility on 31 March 2013. As a, it was not demolished thereafter, but instead extensively refurbished by its new owners. Space was then rented to several parties, including various BBC commercial entities, like BBC Worldwide and BBC Post Production. But the non-profit "BBC proper", which had owned the facility, moved to. A highly publicised grand opening, which included a brief meeting between HM Elizabeth II and Jenna Coleman, formally launched the new age of BBC television production.

Alternate name
Television Centre is sometimes referred to as "Shepherd's Bush" by BBC employees, perhaps because it is the usual penchant for studios to have simple geographic names, like "Ealing", "Lime Grove", or "Teddington". This would have been especially appropriate during the period Television Centre was being most heavily used by Doctor Who, as it was merely the centre of a whole cluster of buildings in Shepherd's Bush that the BBC used in various capacities to produce their content.

As recording studio

 * See List of stories recorded at BBC Television Centre

As location

 * The view from Television Centre's front entrance, across the road toward White City tube station was used to place Ian Chesterton's and Barbara Wright's return to Earth in The Chase.
 * Hammersmith Park, next to Television Centre, doubled as the pitch of Lord's Cricket Ground for the Doctor's TARDIS' momentary materialisation in The Daleks' Master Plan.
 * The front doors of Television Centre doubled as the entrance to the World Ecology Bureau in The Seeds of Doom.
 * An overhead view of the complex was used in The Power of Three, rotated such that west was at the top and the question mark shape was roughly upright. The building highlighted as Rory Williams' hospital was BBC Centre House.
 * In the spring of 2013, around the time of its closure, the Television Centre was used as a major filming location for the anniversary drama An Adventure in Space and Time, which was identified as one of the last dramas to be filmed at the Centre before its decommissioning. Around this same time, several scenes for the anniversary spoof The Five(ish) Doctors Reboot were shot just outside the facility as part of a joke about the fact Doctor Who was filmed in and around Cardiff at the time the comedic story was filmed and aired.

As documentary subject
Television Centre was the subject of David Tennant's documentary, Do You Remember the First Time?, aired as episode 10 of the third series of Doctor Who Confidential. Extensive historical and modern footage of the building was featured, including a cursory examination of which episodes of classic Doctor Who were filmed in which specific studios. For most of the "walkabout" tour of the complex, Tennant was accompanied by writer and future Doctor Who showrunner, Steven Moffat.

It also serves as the backdrop to some of Jon Pertwee's narration of The Pertwee Years, a direct-to-video retrospective on his era in Doctor Who.

In the DWU
Television Centre was bombed - knocking the BBC off the air — during the Internal Counter-Intelligence Service's attempted coup in The Longest Night.

Television Centre is the location of an Eighth Doctor comic, TV Action!, in which the Eighth Doctor and Izzy Sinclair chase Beep the Meep into an alternate universe. There, they land on 12 October 1979 just outside what is presumably the "real" Television Centre. A mad chase through various studios ensues, but Beep has mistaken Tom Baker for the real Fourth Doctor. Beep wishes to extract revenge against Baker for the events of the Fourth Doctor strip, Doctor Who and the Star Beast, but in the end, the actor's tendency to ramble subdues the alien long enough to allow Izzy to overload Beep's Black Star drive, ending the adventure. Much of Television Centre is reasonably accurately portrayed, with the main entrance, central fountain, Blue Peter garden, and circular studio space being recognisably captured by artist Roger Langridge.