Filming locations

Throughout the history of Star Trek, the various television and movie productions have filmed at locations, predominantly in Southern California, to provide a broader scope and grandeur than can be achieved easily on a closed set. Even with the advent of CGI, location shoots have continued.

According to director David Livingston, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine was budgetarily designed to have five or six location shoots per year. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion) Livingston also mentioned that location shootings were always considered as "play days" or "picnics" by the crew and cast. ("New Life and New Civilizations", TNG Season 4 DVD special feature)

Among the location managers and scouts who worked on Star Trek productions are Rhonda Baer, Rick Byrum, Lisa White, and Claudia Eastman.

Star Trek: The Original Series
The pilot episodes, and, were shot on Desilu stages 14, 15, and 16 at Desilu's Culver City facilities. These were the only episodes shot on those sound stages, as they were quickly deemed unusable by the producers. For the rest of the series the sets were moved to stages 9 and 10 at Desilu's Gower Street facilities, which were later combined with the adjacent Paramount studios to form Paramount Stage 31 and Paramount Stage 32. (The Making of Star Trek)

Most often remembered from, the unique slanting points of the Vasquez Rocks Natural Area Park in Southern California's Antelope Valley in Agua Dulce, Los Angeles County also appeared in , , and. 

Additional sequences from, including the sequences where the crewmembers race back and forth across a field several times, where shot at Africa USA Ranch, a wildlife preserve in Soledad Canyon, Los Angeles County that featured exotic animals from around the word, which existed at that time in the Antelope Valley in Southern California. 

The Deneva colony in was filmed at the then futuristic TRW Space and Defense Park in the city of Redondo Beach, California.

Many additional "outside" shots in the original series were actually filmed on the Desilu studio lot, which later became part of the Paramount studio lot. Real office buildings and other structures would be used for scenes in the series. In particular,, and  made extensive use of these structures. The short newsreel footage of the police arrest for "Bread and Circuses" was filmed in front of a Paramount office building. For "Patterns of Force", the Directors' Building and the Producers' Building were both used as the Ekosian headquarters. In "Assignment: Earth," when Kirk and Spock beam in to the rocket base to try to stop Gary Seven, the shots of the NASA building were taken just behind the Marlene Dietrich Building, which as of 2006, housed Paramount's Media Relations department. In addition, a false front was added on to the northwest corner of the Dietrich building so it could be used as the opening to Gary Seven's New York office. 

Another location which was used for was the Producer's Park on the Paramount lot. At the time of filming the episodes it was a wide free area and used to stand-in during a car scene. It was accessible by automobiles. Later it became a parking lot and today it is a green park area surrounded by offices. The Schulberg Building was also part of the same episode, used the Ekosian headquarters. Today it is used for administrative purposes. {{brokenlink|http://www.startrek.com/custom/include/feature/bst/tos-backlot/tos-052-nazi-building/pop.html] The Lubitsch Building can be seen in the background when Kirk and Spock meet an Ekosian soldier. {{brokenlink|http://www.startrek.com/custom/include/feature/bst/tos-backlot/tos-052-nazi-kirk/pop.html}}

The outdoor sequences in {{e|The Paradise Syndrome}} were filmed at the Hollywood Reservoir. Except for a short sequence in {{e|All Our Yesterdays}}, it was the only location shoot that was conducted during Star Trek{{'}}s third season.

Several episodes featuring city street scenes were shot on the RKO-Pathe "40 Acres Backlot" in Culver City, California, which also was the filming location for Gone with the Wind, plus episodes of Batman, the Andy Griffith Show, Hogan's Hero's, and Gomer Pyle among others. Careful observers will note the re-use of buildings, shops, and storefronts, particularly those from The Andy Griffith Show. Star Trek episodes shot on these sets include {{e|Miri}}, {{e|The Return of the Archons}}, and {{e|The City on the Edge of Forever}}. The 40 Acres Backlot also includes a set called "Arab Village". The Rigel VII fortress in was filmed there, and also location scenes in {{e|Errand of Mercy}}, {{e|A Private Little War}}, and {{e|The Omega Glory}}. {{e|A Piece of the Action}} may also have been filmed at 40 Acres. 

The Franklin Canyon Reservoir in the Santa Monica Mountains, Beverly Hills, Los Angeles County was also used as a location. 

The outdoor sequences in {{e|This Side of Paradise}} were filmed on location at the Disney Ranch and in Bronson Canyon, part of Griffith Park in Los Feliz, Los Angeles, California. The outdoor scenes of and {{e|A Private Little War}} were also filmed at Bronson Canyon, although in a much different part of the area, close to the Hollywood sign.

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Star Trek: The Next Generation
In, the holodeck park scenes for the pilot episode were filmed at Griffith Park in Los Angeles, California. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion; Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

In the first season episode, the Tillman Water Reclamation Plant was used as the main outdoor filming location. Later, most of the episodes, including, dealing with the Starfleet Headquarters and the nearby Starfleet Academy were shot at this site, with the filmed segments supplemented with matte backgrounds to fit in with 24th century San Francisco. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion) Its address is 6100 Woodley Avenue, Van Nuys in the San Fernando Vally California. Many of the scenes were filmed at the Japanese Garden, Woodley Avenue Park, between Victory Boulevard and Burbank Boulevard, surrounding the plant designed by Dr. Koichi Kawana. 

The scene in which Wesley Crusher fell into the flowers in the episode was filmed at the Huntington Library in Pasadena. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

The only location shoot in the second season, the scene in which Captain Picard visited the holodeck for an equestrian adventure in, was filmed on a ranch near Thousand Oaks, a suburb of Los Angeles. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

Scenes for the episode were shot at a beach house in Malibu, Los Angeles County. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

For and, the new Enterprise cast and crew returned to the Vasquez Rocks Natural Area Park as a location. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

For the third season episode, the production filmed the surface of Betazed at the Huntington Library botanical gardens in San Marino, a suburb of Los Angeles. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

A private residence on Venture Blvd. in Encino stood in as the Picard family home in Labarre, France in the episode. The vineyard scenes in this episode were filmed at a private dryland operation near Lancaster in the southwest of Edwards Air Force Base in Palmdale. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion, "New Life and New Civilizations", TNG Season 4 DVD special feature)

For the episode, the El Mirage Dry Lake Bed in San Bernardino County, east of Los Angeles was used to portray the surface of Lambda Paz. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

The fourth season episode featured scenes in the Sherwood Forest which were actually filmed at one day location shooting on Tuesday  in the Descanso Gardens, northeast of northeastern Los Angeles suburb Glendale. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

The fifth season episode also featured the Bronson Canyon location, part of Griffith Park, below the famous Hollywood sign to stand in as the surface of El-Adrel IV. The scenes for this episode were filmed on and  under director Rick Kolbe. The next episode,, featured the same location to portray the Bajoran refugee camp on Valo II. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

The opening scenes of the episode showed the Golden Oak Ranch, also known as the Disney Ranch, in the Santa Clarita Valley, north of Los Angeles as the surface of Melona IV. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

Another episode of TNG's fifth season featured a brief location shooting. The episode had Picard on a hiking trip. This scene was filmed again at Bronson Canyon in Griffith Park and later upgraded with matte paintings. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

For the episode location shootings were filmed at the historic Pico House and along Olvera Street in old Los Angeles which stood in for the exterior shots of San Francisco. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion) For the second part,, the scenes were filmed at Paramount's newly-built New York Streets backlot. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion; )

The sixth season episode, which featured a western town, was filmed on a day at the Six Points Texas backlot of the Universal Studios, known as the "Western Town", 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal City, California, USA. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

Although featured no location shooting, non Trek sound stage 10 was used to house the set of the Bonestell Recreation Facility at Starbase Earhart. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

For the season cliffhanger and the opening episode of the seventh season, the crew went on location to shoot several outdoor scenes. Lore's Borg compound was the Brandeis-Bardin Institute and the wood scenes were filmed in the area surrounding the building in Simi Valley, northwest of Los Angeles. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

Griffith Park's Cedar Grove was used to portray the surface of the planet visited in the first episode of the two-part. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

For the surface of Kesprytt III in the episode, the familiar location of Griffith Park's Bronson Canyon was again used. This time the crew went to the location near the Hollywood sign for a two day shoot. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

During the location shooting in Griffith Park's Bronson Canyon for the episode in which the location stood in as surface of Boraal II the crew had to break the filming on  because of the heavy wildfires in that area. According to line producer Merri D. Howard, director Alexander Singer was thankful that the area they've chosen did not burn down and that it was not necessary to search a similar location. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

The holodeck scenes in the episode were filmed on Paramount Pictures' own New York Street backlot, which was largely unaltered for the episode. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

The last episode of the series,, featured a short scene at the Picard vineyards which was filmed at Callaway Vineyard & Winery in Temecula, California instead of the previous used location near Lancaster for the episode. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

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Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
The sequence where Benjamin Sisko and his son Jake sit on a covered bridge within the holodeck and where Benjamin and Jennifer sat down for a picnic were actually filmed at the Golden Oak Ranch, which is operated by the Walt Disney Company. The ranch is located at 19802 Placerita Canyon Road, Newhall, California. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion) The flashback scenes at the Gilgo Beach in  were filmed at the Leo Carrillo State Beach in Malibu, Los Angeles County. Jadzia Dax' perspective of the wormhole terrain was filmed at the Huntington Gardens in San Marino while the baseball field sequence was filmed at the Oak Grove Park in Pasadena. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

The Bajoran Monastery of the Kai garden scenes in the first season episode in  were filmed at Fern Dell, a section of Griffith Park. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

Filming for the first episode of the second season began on in a working rock quarry in Soledad Canyon, north of Los Angeles. Director Winrich Kolbe previously wanted to use Bronson Canyon as the location for Cardassia IV, but admitted that "the damn place has been shot so often, there's not a square inch that hasn't been filmed by somebody". (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

For the second episode of the second season,, the production team returned to Griffith Park's Fern Dell, which was again used to portrayed the Monastery of the Kai garden on Bajor. Another section of the Griffith Park, the bird sanctuary, was used to film O'Brien's decoy scenes in the episode. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

For the episode the production team returned to Bronson Canyon to shoot exterior scenes around the village. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

As the compound of the Albino on Secarus IV, a large house designed by architect, located in Pasadena was used while the interior shots were filmed on Paramount Stage 18. The blown up miniature of the house, created by Dan Curry's team was filmed on the top of Paramount's Van Ness parking structure. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

Several exterior scenes from Sisko's and Quark's camping trip into the Gamma Quadrant on an unnamed planet where they met Eris were filmed again at Griffith Park's bird sanctuary. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

For the third season episode, the production team returned to Huntington Gardens in San Marino which were used to portray the exterior shots on the planet Meridian. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

San Francisco's Sanctuary Districts in the episodes and  were filmed at the New York Street on Paramount's back lot and were the largest exterior shows in Deep Space Nine's history according to Steve Oster. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

For the episode, Bronson Canyon returned as the location, but as the surface of Bajor and for the exterior shots of Shakaar Edon's farm house. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

The hellish Soledad Canyon was again used to portray the desert like surface of Dozaria for the fourth season episode. Producer Steve Oster and director LeVar Burton both remembered the extreme heat during shooting. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

For the episode, Paramount Pictures' construction department headquarters, the Paramount Wood Mill, was used to portray Hangar 18, a military base on Earth. The Mill was located near Paramount Stage 18 on the Paramount lot. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

was an episode which led the characters back to Earth to visit the Starfleet Headquarters. For these scenes the Tillman Water Reclamation Plant, 6100 Woodley Avenue, Van Nuys, Los Angeles, California, including its park was again used to portray the Starfleet location. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

The exterior shots of the Teplan homeworld's main city were shot on location at a mountaintop in the northwest corner of the San Fernando Valley. After art director Randy McIlvain and his team completed the set of the town with twenty foot walls it started to rain and the water-based paint was washed off and no electrical equipment could be used. The sets had to be rebuilt what was leading the shooting and director Rene Auberjonois off schedule. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

Just one episode later,, director LeVar Burton and the production team went out to use Griffith Park's bird sanctuary again, this time as the wooden surface of Vandros IV. Because the team only had one day filming on location several close-ups were later filmed on the sound stage with trees in the background. B.C. Cameron also remembered Burton and herself visiting the location at the day before and the only way up to this location was using golf carts. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

For the second episode of the fifth season,, the production team went back to Soledad Canyon to film the scenes with the crashed Jem'Hadar ship on Torga IV. Again it was like the air temperature was over 100 degrees and director Kim Friedman and assistant director Louis Race remembered the unique set of the crash-landed ship. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

featured the Bronson Canyon again, this time as surface of Ajilon Prime. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

The Malibu beach was used to portray the holiday planet Risa for the episode. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

Mount Whitney in central California, near the city Lone Pine, was chosen to be the location for the episode in which Odo and Quark crash-landed on an uninhabitable planet in the Gamma Quadrant. Steve Oster chose this location since he took an annual trip there. Oster also led the crew to an old US Forestry Service road and director dubbed the location "Steve's Rock". (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

For the episode the Ahmanson Ranch out near Ventura, California was used to stand in for the exterior scenes on Gaia. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

For the episode, part of the sixth season opening arc, the crew went to Sun Valley in the north of Los Angeles and filmed the battle and beach sequences in a rock quarry. The wider view of the ocean was later added in post production. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

The Paramount Pictures back lot came again into the series as the location of 1953 New York in the episode. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

For the episode the production crew thought about a location shooting because of the story between Dax and Worf who crash-landed in a jungle vegetation. Griffith Park's Fern Dell and the nearby Angeles National Forest were considered, but because of the effect heavy opening story arc of the season and very detailed episodes such as the crew and the greens department filled Paramount Stage 5 with all of their trees and plants and used the sound stage instead of the outdoor location. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

's picnic scene of the O'Brien's was filmed at Malibu State Park, which was used as location for productions such as Planet of the Apes and M.A.S.H. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

The desert scenes for the seventh season episode were shot in Lancaster, California near Palmdale at the Club Ed, 42848 150th Street East Lancaster on  and. The actors and crew resided at the local Holiday Inn hotel While the main actors, Avery Brooks, Cirroc Lofton, Nicole de Boer, and Brock Peters filmed their scenes finding the orb, the photo doubles Steve Wilson, Jennifer Berlant, Todd Slayton, and John Lendale Bennett filmed their walk across the sand dunes in the second unit. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion, call sheets and location map)

For the holographic baseball field scenes in the episode, Steve Oster was able to strike a deal with the Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, a campus facility near the ocean. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

Episodes filmed on location

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Star Trek: Voyager
The scenes of the underground court on the Ocampa homeworld in the pilot episode were filmed at the Los Angeles Convention Center. The scenes on the planet's surface, including the Kazon-Ogla village, were filmed at the El Mirage Dry Lake Bed in the High Desert of Southern California. (VOY Season 1 DVD)

The Tillman Water Reclamation Plant again showed up as a building on the unnamed planet in the episode.

Outdoor scenes in the teaser of were filmed at Bronson Caves in Bronson Canyon.

Parts of Bronson Canyon were again used for. The scenes on the unnamed planet in the Delta Quadrant and most of the scenes involving the first landing of the USS Voyager on a planet were filmed in Bronson Canyon, near Hollywood. (VOY Season 2 DVD, trivia text version of "The 37's")

Vasquez Rocks Natural Area Park was again used as a location, for the episode. 

The subway station scenes including Garrett Wang, Robert Duncan McNeill, and Tom Morga were filmed at Paramount's New York Streets backlot.

The episodes and  were both partly filmed at Lone Pine, Inyo County. 

Location filming for and  took place in several areas of Los Angeles, most notably including the Santa Monica Pier and Griffith Observatory. Furthermore, the teaser of "Future's End, Part II" was filmed on the Paramount Pictures lot (also in Los Angeles), with Paramount's administration building appearing in the background of some shots. (Star Trek: Voyager Companion)

The outside civil war scenes of were filmed in Griffith Park. (Star Trek Monthly issue 27, p. 61)

The Japanese Garden, Woodley Avenue Park, between Victory Boulevard and Burbank Boulevard, 6100 Woodley Avenue, Van Nuys in the San Fernando Vally California was again used to portray the Starfleet Academy parks in the episode. 

Paramount's New York Streets backlot was again used for the episode.

The jungle scenes in the Hirogen training facility in the seventh season episode were filmed at the Warner Bros. backlot in late August 2000. Again, Lisa White served as location scout. The call sheets for the episode featured the notes "Rain or Shine" and "Be Prepared for summer weather, bugs, bees and other natural occurrences".

Other locations include the Bronson Caves in Bronson Canyon, Griffith Park, Los Angeles and Burbank, Los Angeles County. 

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Star Trek: Enterprise
The pilot episode features the city Malibu in three scenes which were filmed on. Malibu stood in for Hoshi Sato's exterior classroom in Brazil and the surrounding area and for the flashback scenes on the beach. Another location was the city Bakersfield, which stood in for Broken Bow. The scenes involving the Klingon Klaang, the silo explosion, and the meeting with farmer Moore which were filmed on and.

Rigel X scenes were filmed at the Redondo Power Plant and Hyperion Water Treatment Plant. ( text commentary)

The highway, seen in the episode, is California State Route 138 around Crestline, California. The Main Street is largely Waters Drive, along which are Johnnies Market and General Store, Madeline's cafe, the Crestline station of the Crest Forest Fire District, and the Pine Tree Bar and Grill  across the street from the Vulcans' apartment. All the location shots were filmed near San Bernardino, California. Several back-up shots were later filmed on the Paramount backlot.

The production crew spent five days on location, shooting the episode. They went to a rock quarry in Ventura County, northwest of Los Angeles, to shoot the scenes at the mining colony including two dozens of extras and a few Klingon stuntmen.

For practicing climbing scenes for the episode, stunt coordinator Vince Deadrick, Jr. brought Connor Trinneer, Anthony Montgomery, and Dominic Keating to Stoney Point in the northwest of Los Angeles County. Later they've continued to practice and learned the rappelling techniques at a thirty-foot climbing wall on a private location. The actual scenes in the episode were later filmed on the Paramount sound stage.

The deleted scenes including Chinatown and the Chinese restaurant in the episode, where Jonathan Archer and Becky met in were filmed at Paramount's New York Streets backlot which was also used to portray the space in front of Starfleet Headquarters.

For the season 3 opening episode a short scene was filmed at the Paramount Theater which stood in as Florida location during Trip Tucker's nightmare.

was the first episode of the third season which used a fully outdoor location. The production crew used the Western Town of the Universal Studios backlot as the location of the town and remained there during their seven days schedule. The Western Town set includes the main street, a livery stable, the schoolhouse, and the saloon. For one scene a shuttlepod set dressing was brought into the Western Town.

For the episode the production crew and actors Scott Bakula, Jolene Blalock, and Leland Orser filmed their scenes in downtown Los Angeles which stood in as Detroit. After these scenes the team went to the Lacy Street Production Center near Dodger Stadium, a studio northwest of downtown. It included all the exterior scenes in the Carpenter Street and the nearby rooftops and dark alleys. For the final days, Paramount's New York Streets backlot was used for filming at the same location where 's character was shot in the movie The Godfather.

The final day of shooting for the episode, , was done at Sable Ranch in Canyon Country, near Santa Clarita in the north of Los Angeles which stood in as the wood. Prior scenes were filmed at Paramount's New York Streets backlot, which was turned into a Nazi-occupied New York. Several places of the New York Streets backlot may look familiar as they were used in previous episodes, including, , , and.

Shooting for the episode began, and the second day of shooting on the episode took place at Griffith Park, in Los Angeles, California. It was a short day, only 6.5 hours long, and came in well under budget. Two scenes were done featuring Scott Bakula, Connor Trinneer, Anthony Montgomery, Jack Gwaltney, and several extras as Nazis and MACOs. The Paramount New York Streets backlot was again used to portray New York.

The scenes in the Vulcan's Forge in the episode were filmed at an industrial site in Simi Valley, Ventura County, in the northwest of Los Angeles. The location shooting included two days and actors Scott Bakula, Jolene Blalock, and Michael Nouri. The location used is owned by the mining company P.W. Gillibrand and was later enhanced in post production.

For the episode the story was placed on Earth in San Francisco, near Madame Chang's Mandarin Cafe, which was actually filmed on the Paramount lot between the studio's Administration building and another building which was also used as the high school in Happy Days.

The Paramount Wood Mill was used as location for the episodes and  for scenes in which Lieutenant Reed met Harris in an alley near the San Francisco Bay. For the same episodes the Paramount Theater was used again. This time it portrayed the Assembly Hall of Starfleet Command during the interstellar conference. The Paramount Theater was also the place where the first screenings for several Trek series were held, including the Enterprise episodes and.

On day of shooting for the episode was done on location. For the scene in which the characters of Scott Bakula and Ada Maris go on a climbing trip, the Malibu Creek State Park filled in as location.

Another location was the Valley of Enchantment, San Bernardino National Forest, California. 

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The Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming stood in for the planet Vulcan between 8 August and. Paramount's B Tank also served as a location for the Vulcan scenes.

A special effects scene by the ILM crew was filmed at the Cow Palace in Daly City, San Mateo County. 

Another scene was filmed at the Golden Gate Park in San Francisco, California. 

The scene placed on Vulcan, shortly before the fal-tor-pan ceremony on Mount Seleya, was filmed at the fountain of Occidental College, 1600 Campus Road at Alumni Avenue, Eagle Rock, City of Los Angeles, California. 

The Voyage Home was filmed in large measure in the San Francisco Bay area in California. For example, the scene where Kirk just about gets hit by a car was filmed at the corner of Kearney, Pacific Avenue, and Columbus in downtown San Francisco. The Cetacean Institute, where the humpback whales known as "George and Gracie" were located, is the Monterey Bay Aquarium located south of San Francisco in the city of Monterey, 886 Cannery Row. The parking lot for the Klingon Bird-of-Prey, the Golden Gate Park, is actually the Will Rogers State Park, 14253 Sunset Boulevard, Pacific Palisades in Los Angeles. For the planet Vulcan was again used the Vasquez Rocks Natural Area Park, 10700 West Escondido Canyon Road, in Agua Dulce, in the high desert of Los Angeles. Other locations in the movie were filmed on the USS Ranger (CV-61) in Alameda, Alameda County, Marin Headlands, Marin County, Oakland International Airport, Oakland, Alameda County, the Marin Drive near Fort Point at the Presidio of San Francisco, and the San Francisco locations Grant Avenue, Fresno Alley, Columbus and Mason, Golden Gate Bridge, and Marina Green. Underwater photography including the miniature whale models was filmed in a swimming pool at College of Marin in Indian Valley, Novato, Marin County. The scenes at Plexicorp were filmed at Reynolds Polymer Technology Inc. (then Reynolds & Taylor, Inc.), 311 E. Alton Avenue, Santa Ana, Orange County. Other locations in Southern California include the Centinela-Freeman Medical Center, 555 E. Hardy Street, Inglewood, Los Angeles County and the United States Naval Air Station North Island, Coronado, San Diego County. 

The final scenes with the Bird-of-Prey in the water and the main cast jumping into the water was filmed at Paramount's B Tank, a floodable parking lot of Paramount Pictures. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

The opening climbing sequences of The Final Frontier were filmed at Yosemite National Park in California, namely the El Capitan and Inspiration Point. The Owens Dry Lake in the Mojave Desert in Lone Pine, Inyo County, Alabama Hills in central California stood in as Nimbus III while Trona Pinnacles Recreation Lands, and an area in the Searles Dry Lake Bed in Trona, San Bernardino County, central California, was used as Sha Ka Ree. 

The Undiscovered Country had a few notable filming locations. Some of the Rura Penthe sequences were filmed in northern Alaska, which marked the first time Star Trek had been filmed outside of the state of California. Bob Crockett and his company Alaska Locations, Inc. served as location scout for these scenes which were filmed at the Knik Glacier, Chugach State Park, Valdez-Cordova Census Area. 

In addition, internal and external shots for Camp Khitomer were filmed at the Brandeis-Bardin Institute, a religious retreat in Simi Valley, Ventura County in Southern California. Additional shots, also for the matte painting, of Camp Khitomer were filmed at the Fireman's Fund Building in Novato, Marin County. 

The external shots of Rura Penthe were filmed at the Bronson Caves at Bronson Canyon, part of Griffith Park in Los Angeles, California. The interior shots of Rura Penthe were filmed on Paramount Stage 16. (David G. Trotti, ENT Season 2 DVD special "Enterprise Secrets")

The Starfleet Headquarters briefing room scene was shot at the First Presbyterian Church of Hollywood, 1760 N. Gower Street in Hollywood, Los Angeles, Los Angeles County. The scenes were filmed on Wednesday the and Thursday the. 

Silica Dome in the Valley of Fire State Park in Overton, Clark County, Las Vegas, Nevada was used as location of Veridian III, where the final scenes of the movie were also filmed, standing in as the location for the showdown. The place where Captain Kirk and Captain Picard first met was filmed at the Hart Flat Road, Keene, Kern County, central California and the owner received a new kitchen and staircase built for the movie, while the wide shot horse riding scenes with Kirk and Picard were filmed at William Shatner's own farm in the Alabama Hills, Lone Pine, Inyo County, including his own horses. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

The barn and horse jump of Shatner and Stewart was filmed at the ranch of late actor. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

The first scenes of the TNG crew aboard the holographic brig USS Enterprise (brig) where filmed aboard the Lady Washington a few miles offshore of Marina del Rey, Los Angeles. These scenes were filmed in five days and the anchors were dropped before sunup. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

An elegant private mansion in Los Angeles, located at 465 South Grand Avenue, Pasadena, was used to portray the Nexus home of Captain Picard. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

Two weeks of the shooting were held at the Big Bear Mountain range in Los Angeles. 

Scenes inside the missile complex housing Cochrane's Phoenix were filmed in four days at the Titan Missile Museum, 1580 West Duval Mine Road, Green Valley, Pima County, near Tucson, Arizona. The museum includes some memorabilia from the movie. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

The second location shoot was in the Angeles National Forest in Los Angeles County, including its Charlton Flats, in the San Gabriel Mountains which stood in for the village scenes, consisting of fourteen huts, placed in Bozeman, Montana. The crew shot these scenes in two weeks of nighttime including the first contact sequence filled with dozens of extras. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

The third and last location used of this film was an art deco restaurant in L.A.'s Union Station, 800 N. Alameda Street, Downtown, Los Angeles, California which was used to portray the Dixon Hill holodeck program dance hall. It was filled with ten musicians, fifteen stunt performers, and 120 background performers. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

The wood and field scenes were filmed on the Ventura Farms and near Thousand Oaks. This shooting also included helicopter shots of the green area which were cut from the final movie. The scene between Anij and Captain Picard when she stopped the time was filmed at Ventura Farms. (Star Trek: Insurrection (Special Edition))

The Ba'ku village was built at Lake Sherwood, Westlake Village in Ventura County, near Thousand Oaks, and was the largest outdoor set ever planned for a Star Trek movie. (Star Trek: Insurrection (Special Edition)) (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

The scenes on the Ba'ku lake and Data's steps into the water where the holoship was placed were filmed at the San Gabriel Dam, Azusa, Los Angeles County and at Convict Lake, Mammoth Lakes, Mono County in the Sierra Nevadas. (Star Trek: Insurrection (Special Edition))

Several scenes during the trail of the Ba'ku and the fights with the Son'a on the mountains were filmed at Mammoth Mountain, Lake Sabrina, and the town Mammoth Lakes, Mono County in California. (Star Trek: Insurrection (Special Edition))

Additional scenes were shot in Bishop, Inyo County. 

The close ups of Patrick Stewart, Donna Murphy, and Brent Spiner after their jumps into the water were filmed in Paramount's B tank, a floodable parking lot at Paramount Pictures. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

Locations include the midway between El Mirage Dry Lake in El Mirage, San Bernardino County and the Edwards Air Force Base which stood in for Kolarus III on an eight day location shoot and the east side of Lancaster, off Avenue C between 235th and the San Bernardino County line, Lancaster, Los Angeles County. (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion)

Vasquez Rocks Natural Area Park, 10700 West Escondido Canyon Road, near north Los Angeles was again used to portray the surface of the planet Vulcan. Scenes at the bar were filmed in an bar in Hollywood. The Oviatt Library at the California State University, Northridge and the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco were used as Starfleet Academy, upgraded with digital technology and blue and green screens. In the Long Beach City Hall, 333 West Ocean Boulevard Kirk and Spock faced the trial after Kirk cheated at the Kobayashi Maru test while the ice planet Delta Vega was recreated at the parking lot of the Dodger Stadium, 1000 Elysian Park Avenue, downtown Los Angeles which was also the location for the Romulan drill platform. Other locations include Budweiser Brewery Anheuser-Busch Inc, 15800 Roscoe Boulevard, Van Nuys, California as the machine room of the Enterprise and the Long Beach Generating Station at Terminal Island as the machine room of the USS Kelvin. The Long Beach Generating Station was previously used to film the prison scenes placed on Rura Penthe which were deleted from the final movie. (Star Trek (Three disc Blu-ray) special "Starships")

The aerial shots of Delta Vega were filmed at Alaska. The shots were provided by the company SouthCoastHelicopters.com. 

Further scenes were filmed in Bakersfield, Kern County, California which stood in as Iowa; in Rose Hills Memorial Park, 3888 Workman Mill Road in Whittier, California, where the SkyRose Chapel was used as the building of the Vulcan High Council; and the Pastoria Energy Facility in Lebec, Kern County, California, which was used for the Riverside Shipyard. 

Additional shots of the planet Vulcan were filmed in San Rafael Swell in Utah, and Hangar 1 was filmed in a hangar in Tustin, California. 

As of 16 November 2011, J.J. Abrams scouted a location on Hawaii as a possible jungle planet. Also, a museum in Los Angeles will stand-in as a "famous Star Trek location".