---
name: location-request-letter
description: "Writes a formal, professional letter requesting permission to film at a specific location, covering the production's purpose, proposed dates, crew size, insurance, and any measures to minimise disruption."
status: stable
category: tv-documentary
subcategory: pre-production
version: 1.0
eval_score: 4.47
tags: [documentary, pre-production, location, permissions, correspondence, filming]
---
# Location Request Letter

## What This Skill Does
Writes a formal, professional letter requesting permission to film at a specific location, covering the production's purpose, proposed dates, crew size, insurance, and any measures to minimise disruption.

## When To Use This Skill
- You have identified a filming location and need to write a formal request to the owner, manager, or governing body
- You are approaching a public institution (museum, hospital, school, government building) that requires a written request before granting access
- You need to reassure a private property owner or business that your production will be professional, insured, and minimally disruptive
- Your production manager has asked you to draft the initial approach letter and you want a clean, credible starting point

## What You Need To Provide
**Required:**
- Name and address of the location (or the person/office you are writing to)
- Production title and a one-sentence description of the documentary's subject
- Production company name (or your name if independent)
- What you want to film at this location (interview, general views, a specific scene or sequence)
- Proposed date(s) or date range
- Approximate crew size

**Optional:**
- Duration of access needed (half day, full day, multiple days)
- Any specific areas within the location you need access to
- Whether you will need to move furniture, bring lighting equipment, or use drones
- Whether you carry production insurance and can provide a certificate
- Broadcaster or distributor (if attached — adds credibility)
- Any previous correspondence or contact name at the location
- Specific concerns the location owner is likely to have (noise, parking, public access disruption)

## How the Assistant Approaches This
1. **Opens with clarity and brevity.** States who is writing, the production company, the documentary subject (in one non-technical sentence), and the specific request — permission to film at the named location. No marketing language, no overselling. Location owners respond to professionalism and straightforwardness.

2. **Explains why this location matters.** One or two sentences connecting the location to the documentary's subject in a way that is respectful and genuine. This is not flattery — it is context that helps the recipient understand why their location was chosen and what will be filmed there.

3. **Covers the practical details.** Crew size, proposed dates, duration of access, areas needed, equipment being brought in. Uses specific numbers and honest language. If the shoot will involve anything unusual (lighting rigs, tripods in public areas, drone footage), states it directly rather than hoping to negotiate later.

4. **Addresses likely concerns proactively.** Offers to minimise disruption (flexible scheduling, working around public hours, limiting access to specific areas). Mentions insurance, risk assessment availability, and willingness to sign a location agreement. For sensitive locations (hospitals, schools, religious sites), acknowledges the sensitivity of the environment without being obsequious.

5. **Closes with a clear next step.** Proposes a call or site visit to discuss the request, provides direct contact details, and thanks the recipient. Does not assume permission — asks for it.

## Output Format
Formal business letter, 300–450 words. Addressed to a named individual or office. Opens with "Dear [Name/Title]" and closes with "Yours sincerely" (UK) or "Sincerely" (US). Structured as 4–5 short paragraphs — no bullet points in the body unless listing specific practical details. Tone: professional, respectful, direct, and honest. Not corporate-stiff — the letter should read as if written by a real producer, not a legal department. Placeholders in [BRACKETS] for any details the user did not provide (e.g., [INSURANCE POLICY NUMBER], [YOUR PHONE NUMBER]).

## Quality Criteria
- [ ] Letter opens by clearly identifying who is writing and what they are asking for — no ambiguity in the first paragraph
- [ ] The documentary's subject is described in plain, non-technical language that a non-media person can understand
- [ ] Specific practical details (crew size, dates, duration, equipment) are included or flagged as placeholders
- [ ] At least one concern the recipient is likely to have is addressed proactively (disruption, insurance, public access)
- [ ] Tone is professional and respectful without being sycophantic or overly formal
- [ ] Letter closes with a specific proposed next step (call, visit, email reply) and contact details
- [ ] No unsupported claims about the production's prestige, audience size, or broadcast guarantees unless provided by the user
- [ ] Length stays within 300–450 words — long enough to be thorough, short enough to be read

## Example

### Input
**Location:** Ashworth Maritime Museum, 12 Harbour Road, Portmere, Devon, PM3 6JL
**Contact:** Ms. Helen Graves, Museum Director
**Production title:** Tides of Change
**Description:** A documentary about how coastal communities in England are adapting to rising sea levels and what is being lost in the process.
**Production company:** Lighthouse Films
**What to film:** Interior general views of the museum's permanent exhibition on local maritime history, and an interview with a museum volunteer in the main gallery (approx. 45 minutes).
**Proposed dates:** Week of 5 May 2026 (flexible on specific day)
**Crew size:** 3 (director, camera operator, sound recordist)
**Duration:** Half day (approx. 4 hours)
**Insurance:** Full production insurance held — certificate available on request.
**Broadcaster:** Not yet attached; self-funded development phase.

### Output

Lighthouse Films
[ADDRESS]
[EMAIL]
[PHONE]

Ms. Helen Graves
Museum Director
Ashworth Maritime Museum
12 Harbour Road
Portmere, Devon PM3 6JL

[DATE]

Dear Ms. Graves,

I am writing to request permission to film at Ashworth Maritime Museum for a documentary called *Tides of Change*, which explores how coastal communities in England are adapting to rising sea levels and what is being lost along the way.

The museum's permanent exhibition on local maritime history is directly relevant to the story we are telling — it documents the relationship between Portmere's community and the sea in a way that no other archive or location can. We would like to film interior general views of the exhibition and conduct a short interview (approximately 45 minutes) with one of your museum volunteers in the main gallery.

We are a small crew of three — director, camera operator, and sound recordist — and would need access for approximately four hours on a day during the week of 5 May 2026. We are flexible on the specific day and happy to work around your opening hours, school visits, or any other commitments. Our equipment is handheld and battery-powered; we would not need to move display cases, mount anything to walls, or bring in lighting rigs beyond a small portable LED panel.

Lighthouse Films holds full production insurance, and I can provide a certificate of insurance and a risk assessment in advance. We are also happy to sign any location agreement or filming conditions your museum requires.

I would welcome the opportunity to visit the museum beforehand to discuss the request in person and to agree on any specific conditions. Please do not hesitate to contact me at [PHONE] or [EMAIL] if you have any questions.

Thank you for considering this request. I look forward to hearing from you.

Yours sincerely,

[YOUR NAME]
Producer / Director
Lighthouse Films

---

## Known Limitations
- This skill produces a first-approach letter. It does not generate location agreements, licence-to-film contracts, or risk assessments — these are separate legal documents that should be drafted by the production's legal advisor or insurer.
- For locations governed by specific regulations (military sites, prisons, NHS hospitals, schools with safeguarding requirements), the standard letter will need supplementing with sector-specific documentation. The assistant flags these where it can, but cannot know every jurisdiction's requirements.
- The letter assumes good faith on both sides. It does not handle hostile or pre-refused situations — if a location has already declined or has a blanket no-filming policy, a different approach (escalation, alternative contacts, formal FOI routes for public bodies) is needed.

## Related Skills
- [location-scout-brief](../location-scout-brief/SKILL.md) — research and evaluate a location before writing the request
- [call-sheet-writer](../call-sheet-writer/SKILL.md) — generate the call sheet once location access is confirmed
- [equipment-list-generator](../equipment-list-generator/SKILL.md) — detail the kit you will bring, which may need to be disclosed in the request
