Parking host guide for Prague film productions
Film and photo productions create intense, short parking demand around a location. Crew cars, vans, generators, and equipment need different spaces and access times. A nearby private host can help with ordinary parking, but it is not a filming permit, a road closure, a loading zone, or permission to occupy a neighbour’s frontage.
Separate the production vehicles
List crew cars, vans, trailers, equipment handoffs, and overnight needs separately. The special-vehicle hub and van parking guide help check fit; the event-venue host guide covers crowd and timing changes. Confirm any use of public space with the relevant authority and keep private parking separate.
Write instructions for a moving schedule
Describe the gate, turning room, surface, height, lighting, contact window, and latest departure. The access-failure plan helps when a shot moves, a road closes, or a vehicle arrives after the planned handoff. Keep gate codes and residents’ details private, and do not publish a full call sheet in a listing.
Review each shoot day
Track vehicle fit, late returns, neighbour questions, access incidents, cancellations, and hours actually used. Close or adjust availability when the production schedule changes. The host flow is appropriate after authority and physical fit are confirmed, not as a replacement for a location manager’s permits.
Good production supply keeps ordinary crew parking predictable while respecting residents, pedestrians, filming permissions, and the host’s actual control.
For multiple vehicles, keep a simple register of which car uses which space, who has the host contact, and when availability closes. A production may move quickly, but the host still needs permission, safe access, and time to handle an incident. Confirm trailers and vans separately by their dimensions. Clear supply reduces crew circling without turning a private courtyard into unmanaged production parking.