The Canary Islands' audiovisual landscape has just gained a top-tier asset with the official registration of Orilla Sur Producciones, AIE. This Economic Interest Grouping, based in San Bartolomé de Tirajana, is not your average production company: it's the flagship operation in the archipelago of the Womack Group, a Spanish conglomerate that has grown from a turnover of 34 million euros to become an independent giant with offices in Seville, Madrid, Miami, and Santo Domingo.
The choice of Avenida Alejandro del Castillo as its base of operations is part of a "safe harbor" strategy for audiovisual capital. By operating under the Canary Islands Special Zone (ZEC) regime and the islands' tax incentive scheme, Womack seeks to optimize the production of an ambitious portfolio that already includes 30 projects in development for the next two years. The group, chaired by José Carlos Conde, arrives on the island with the backing of having produced hits such as the film No sé decir adiós (winner at the Goya Awards and the Málaga Film Festival) and the biographical series about Camarón de la Isla, which marked the debut of Spanish non-fiction on Netflix.
The structure of this new entity in southern Gran Canaria, where Aire GC Productions is listed as a founding partner and Airam del Pino Martel Guedes as administrator, is designed to act as a magnet for major productions. Womack not only contributes content but also a vision for industrial infrastructure. Its CEO has already demonstrated his execution capabilities with the €30 million megaproject in the port of Cádiz, and its arrival in San Bartolomé de Tirajana suggests that the municipality could host some of the four films and three television series that the group currently has in development.
With a turnover approaching €40 million when including its shareholdings, Womack Studios arrives in the Canary Islands in the midst of a major expansion into the OTT platform and international cinema markets. The creation of Orilla Sur Producciones, AIE, on February 9, 2026, marks the beginning of a new era where southern Gran Canaria ceases to be merely a natural "live-action" film set and becomes a hub for financial and creative decisions for a group that, in just a decade, has become an essential reference point in the Spanish film industry.











