Plans for Crown Works Studios, the £450 million film-production hub backed by James Corden’s Fulwell 73, were thrown into doubt when private equity firm Cain International exited the project on 30 June, citing a shift in investment priorities. The withdrawal leaves a major hole in the financing package for the 19-sound-stage complex, which had been scheduled to break ground on Sunderland’s Riverside this autumn.
FulwellCain Studios confirmed it is “actively engaging alternative funders,” while Sunderland City Council and the North East Combined Authority have appointed a specialist agent to secure a new lead investor and say they expect an agreement before year-end. Fulwell 73 remains attached to the venture and continues pre-construction work on the brownfield site beside the Northern Spire Bridge.
Public money is still on the table: £25 million in government remediation cash survives last week’s Budget, and the mayoral authority has pledged up to £120 million in backing for infrastructure and training programmes. Supporters argue those commitments, coupled with a studio shortage in the U.K.’s booming screen sector, will attract fresh capital; Screen Daily notes Crown Works had previously secured £37 million in national studio-incentive funding announced in early 2024.
The scheme promises up to 8,450 jobs and £2 billion in regional economic output by 2033, projections local business groups call “transformational” even after the setback. Yet opposition councillors warn the development risks becoming a “white elephant” if delays push production companies south to new facilities at Shinfield and Broxbourne. The Sunderland Echo reports preparatory works funded by the council are continuing, but main construction cannot commence until fresh equity is in place.
Industry observers say timing is critical: global insurers are pressuring studio operators to lock in sound-stage capacity ahead of expected SAG-AFTRA contract talks next spring, while enhanced U.K. tax relief for visual-effects production begins in January 2026. Fulwell 73 co-founder Leo Pearlman has previously argued that bringing large-scale production to the North-East would replicate the economic impact Nissan delivered to the city in the 1980s, but delivering that vision now hinges on finding a replacement for Cain International before confidence erodes.