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Council outdoor cinema event in Perth with community audience and 5m inflatable screen
Council Outdoor Cinema Hire Perth

Council Outdoor Cinema Hire Perth: The 2026 Programme Guide

Perth Pop-Up Movies Updated May 2026 13 min read โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… 4.8 from 20 reviews
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Councils across Perth and the Peel region are rediscovering outdoor cinema as a way to deliver free, accessible, all ages community events that align directly with Strategic Community Plan outcomes. This is the complete 2026 guide for council event coordinators considering outdoor cinema for council programmes. Programme tiers, compliance, accessibility, sustainability, real pricing, and worked examples for both 5m community and 8m large event setups. Past delivery experience with the Shire of Murray.

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$10M
Public liability
insurance
1,200
Maximum
attendance per event
~$1
Per attendee
Summer Series rate
25%
Annual partnership
discount

Why Perth councils book outdoor cinema in 2026

Outdoor cinema has become one of the lowest cost, highest impact community event formats available to local government. The maths is simple. A single 5m community cinema event delivers up to 230 attendances. A six event Summer Series delivers 3,000 to 4,800 community attendances across one programme. At Summer Series rates, the per attendee cost is under one dollar.

The format checks boxes that almost no other event type can simultaneously. Free entry removes financial barriers. Outdoor venues mean no hall hire cost. Accessibility is built in. The events are family rated. Local food trucks and community groups participate, multiplying the economic benefit. There is virtually no long term infrastructure footprint.

Council coordinators searching for value for ratepayer money keep ending up at outdoor cinema because the numbers work in a way that very few other community event formats do.

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Cost benchmark. Average council community event cost in Australia is $10 to $30 per attendee. Outdoor cinema delivered as a programme runs at under $1 per attendee on the screen hire, and around $4.60 per attendee fully loaded with toilets, licensing and lighting. Less than half the typical benchmark, even at the high end.

Strategic Community Plan alignment

The reason outdoor cinema gets council approval almost everywhere is because it maps directly onto Strategic Community Plan outcomes that every WA council is required to publish. Three outcomes appear in almost every council’s plan, and outdoor cinema contributes to all three.

Outcome 1: Vibrant, engaged communities

Free, accessible, all ages community events that increase resident participation in public space and strengthen community connection. Each event activates a council park or public space and brings residents together across age groups, suburbs and demographics. Outdoor cinema is the highest reach per dollar event format available.

Outcome 2: Accessible and connected communities

Physical accessibility through step free access and designated wheelchair zones. Cultural accessibility through Welcome to Country or Acknowledgement of Country at every event, plus film selection that includes culturally diverse stories. Economic accessibility through free entry, removing financial barriers across all socioeconomic groups.

Outcome 3: Natural environment to enjoy

Events delivered in public parks and reserves, encouraging residents to engage with their local environment in the evening. Setup is low impact, leaves no permanent infrastructure, and follows a published Waste Management Plan that prioritises reusable equipment, battery power where practical, and diversion of recyclables, batteries and e-waste from landfill.

The alignment statements above are written so council coordinators can lift them directly into council reports and acquittal documents. For the broader overview of Perth outdoor cinema including screen sizes and event types, read the Perth outdoor cinema 2026 complete guide. For honest criteria when comparing operators, the Perth outdoor cinema buyer’s guide walks through the questions to ask.

Programme options for councils

Four tiers based on the council’s annual programme size. Most councils start with a single event, then move to a Summer Series or Annual Partnership once the format proves itself. The longer the partnership, the better the per event rate.

Single Event
1 event
Standard
Standard rate, no programme discount
Ideal for council coordinators trialling outdoor cinema for the first time. Risk free, no annual commitment. Most councils start here, then expand to a Summer Series the following year.
Trio Programme
3 events in 12 months
10% off
Save $180 (5m) or $330 (8m)
Three events spread across the year, often summer, autumn and a school holiday window. Builds a small recognisable council programme without the full Summer Series commitment.
Annual Partnership
12 events in 12 months
25% off
Save $1,800 (5m) or $3,300 (8m)
Maximum tier for councils running year round outdoor cinema programmes. Events spread across all seasons including indoor and winter formats. Best value per event.

The Summer Series option in detail

The Summer Series is the most popular tier for Perth councils. Six events between December and April creates a recognisable council programme that residents associate with their local government, rather than scattered one off bookings.

Suggested event calendar

December Pre Christmas family film, paired with carols
January (early) School holidays family event
January (Australia Day) Evening community film tied to council programme
February Valentines or Summer favourites night
March Cultural diversity programming (Harmony Week)
April School holidays family closer event

Why the Summer Series works for councils

  • Year long community engagement, not a single peak
  • Recognisable programme that builds repeat audience
  • Reduced per event marketing cost (one campaign, six events)
  • Volume discount of 20 percent across the series
  • Spread of demographic reach across school terms and holidays
  • Single point of supplier coordination for the council events team
  • Estimated 3,000 to 4,800 attendances across the series

Real pricing for council outdoor cinema events

The screen hire fee covers the screen, projector, professional sound system, full setup, on site management and pack down. Backup projector and amplifier on every event.

Screen Size Capacity Per Event Summer Series (6 events, 20% off)
5m community Up to 230 attendees $600 $2,880 total
8m community Up to 1,200 attendees $1,100 $5,280 total

Optional add ons

  • Generator for venues without mains power: $150 (5m) or $300 (8m), fuel included
  • Silent battery inverter: same price as the equivalent generator, zero engine noise
  • Speaker upgrade for larger crowds: from $100
  • Bean bag seating for accessibility zone or VIP area: $11 per bag for 24 hours
  • Smoke, bubble or laser effect machines: $30 each
  • Travel: $4 per kilometre one way from Kwinana

Required event additions (council sourced or coordinated)

The following typically fall outside the screen hire package. Each council sets its own thresholds, with most kicking in between 100 and 500 attendees. Council can source independently, or Perth Pop-Up Movies can coordinate sourcing at supplier cost plus 10 percent sourcing fee.

Item Typical cost Threshold
Film public performance licence $300 to $700 per event Required for any public event
Portable toilets $1,000 to $2,500 per event Council policy, often 100 to 500 attendees
Audience and pathway lighting $300 to $1,500 per event Evening events at various thresholds
Event first aid Set by provider (St John or similar) Council policy
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The price quoted is the price invoiced. No weekend, public holiday or school holiday surcharges. Ever. Programme bookings can be paid in advance or invoiced per event, council preference. Net 14 day invoice terms.

Worked example: Summer Series for a Perth council

5m community screen, six events, venue 30km from Kwinana, all add ons coordinated by Perth Pop-Up Movies. Indicative figures only.

Line item Calculation Cost
Screen hire, 6 events 5m base $600 ร— 6, less 20% Summer Series $2,880
Travel 30km ร— $4 ร— 6 events $720
Film licences 6 ร— ~$500 avg + 10% sourcing $3,300
Portable toilets 6 ร— ~$1,500 + 10% sourcing $9,900
Audience lighting 6 ร— ~$800 + 10% sourcing $5,280
Programme total $22,080
Average per event $3,680
Per attendee (4,800 total programme attendances) $4.60

At fully loaded $4.60 per attendee, this programme runs at well below half the typical Australian council community event cost benchmark. Councils can reduce costs further by sourcing add ons independently rather than through the operator.

Local economic multiplier: ratepayer money flowing through the local economy

When the council invests in an outdoor cinema programme, the impact reaches further than the screen hire fee. Local food trucks, coffee vans, musicians and community groups all benefit from each event. This is the framing council coordinators use when justifying the spend to council and ratepayers.

Where the money flows on each event

  • Food trucks: 3 to 5 local operators selling dinner to attendees, roughly $1,500 to $3,000 in resident spend per event
  • Coffee or dessert van: roughly $400 to $800 in resident spend per event
  • Local musician for pre show: council pays a local performer $300 to $500 to play before the film
  • Volunteer fundraising: a local sporting club or community group runs a sausage sizzle and raises $400 to $800 net for their group
  • Local photographer: optional, $250 to $500 if engaged
Per event impact

Roughly $2,800 to $5,600 flows to local Perth businesses every event

On top of the council’s screen hire investment. Across a six event Summer Series, roughly $17,000 to $34,000 of additional local economic activity is created alongside the council programme. The screen hire fee becomes a community wide economic stimulus, not a single supplier transaction.

Accessibility: built into the format

Outdoor cinema has built in accessibility advantages over most council event formats. The expectations from disability advocates and the WA Disability Services Commission are easy to meet.

Physical accessibility

  • Wheelchair accessible viewing area at the front of the screening zone
  • Viewing area positioned to use existing step free venue access
  • Accessible parking, toilets and pathways signposted on event signage
  • No fixed seating, attendees bring chairs or use ground seating

Sensory accessibility

  • Closed captioning available where the source film supports it, at council discretion
  • Sound levels managed in real time to avoid sensory overload
  • Quiet zones can be designated on request
  • Strobe and laser effects optional, can be disabled for sensory sensitive events

Cultural accessibility

  • Welcome to Country or Acknowledgement of Country at every event
  • Film selection includes culturally diverse stories on rotation
  • Multilingual signage available on request

Economic accessibility

  • Free entry for all council events
  • No paid upgrades required for full enjoyment
  • Food and drink optional, with affordable price points encouraged across vendors

Compliance, insurance and licensing

The procurement and risk teams will check every box below. We meet all of them as standard.

Public Liability Insurance

$10 million cover. Certificate of Currency provided on request. Council can be named as additional insured at no extra cost.

Work Health & Safety

Compliant with WHS Act 2020 (WA) and WHS (General) Regulations 2022 (WA).

Electrical Compliance

All equipment test and tagged AS/NZS 3760. Portable RCD on every supply. AS/NZS 3000 wiring compliance.

Noise Compliance

Environmental Protection (Noise) Regulations 1997 (WA). Sound managed to 75 dB(A) at venue boundary or council specified.

Risk Management

Published Job Safety Analysis (Version 2, May 2026) covering all event hazards. Site specific dynamic risk assessment before every setup.

Film Performance Licensing

Sourced through Roadshow Public Performance Licensing or Amalgamated Movies. Council retains final film selection authority.

Wind and weather thresholds

A handheld anemometer is carried on every event and monitored throughout. Operating decisions:

Wind Speed Status Action
Below 25 km/h Normal Operate as planned
25 to 30 km/h Caution Increase monitoring, brief organiser
30 to 35 km/h Hold Pause projection, prepare to deflate
Above 35 km/h Stop Deflate, secure equipment, postpone

Postponement due to weather: free reschedule within 6 months at operator discretion.

Sustainability and waste management

Outdoor cinema is one of the lowest environmental impact council event formats available. Our published Waste Management Plan (Version 2, May 2026) details our specific commitments.

What we do

  • Reusable equipment first. Screens, projectors, sound systems, lighting, bean bags, generators reusable across many events
  • Battery power where practical. Silent battery inverter offered as default option, replacing petrol generator
  • Velcro over cable ties. Phasing out single use cable ties in favour of reusable wraps
  • Digital first paperwork. Bookings, invoices and run sheets digital. Printed copies only on specific request
  • Battery stewardship. Batteries dropped at B-cycle collection points per Australian Battery Stewardship Scheme
  • E-waste diversion. Projector lamps and LED units taken to City of Kwinana e-waste drop off or authorised processor
  • Bean bag end of life. EPS bead fill decanted into new covers to avoid microplastic release

Past council work: Shire of Murray

Perth Pop-Up Movies has previously delivered a 5m community cinema event for the Shire of Murray at Pinjarra. The project demonstrated capability to deliver at council scale, including risk management, public liability cover, full setup and pack down, and delivery of a free community event for residents.

The Shire’s outdoor cinema programme is no longer running due to internal restructuring and the departure of the original events officer. A direct personal reference from the former events officer is available on request.

What this proves

Real council delivery experience, not just hospitality work

The Murray project shows we have delivered a council scale event under standard council procurement, insurance and risk requirements. While the Murray programme itself ended for reasons unrelated to PPM delivery, the project remains a clean reference point for capability when councils ask “have you done this before”.

Council event types we deliver for

Outdoor cinema can anchor or sit alongside almost any council event programme.

Request a council proposal

Detailed written proposal with programme tiers, accessibility plan, sustainability plan, risk management overview and pricing. Tailored to your council’s Strategic Community Plan outcomes.

Response within 24 business hours.

Council outdoor cinema FAQ

Yes. We provide a full written proposal covering programme structure, Strategic Community Plan alignment, accessibility commitments, sustainability plan, risk management summary, full pricing, payment terms and cancellation policy. The proposal is formatted so council coordinators can lift content directly into council reports. Standard turnaround is 5 business days.
$10 million public liability insurance. Certificate of Currency available on request within 24 hours. Council can be named as an additional insured on the certificate at no extra cost. The council retains responsibility for its own event public liability cover where required by its own procurement standards.
Yes. We coordinate film public performance licences through Roadshow Public Performance Licensing or Amalgamated Movies at supplier cost plus 10 percent sourcing fee. Council can also source independently to avoid the sourcing fee. Council retains final film selection authority either way.
The 5m community screen suits events up to 230 attendees, ideal for suburb-level community events. The 8m community screen suits major council events up to 1,200 attendees, ideal for Australia Day, festivals and large public events. Beyond 1,200 attendees, multiple screens or a major event setup is required.
Welcome to Country and Acknowledgement of Country are arranged by the council directly with the local traditional owners. We provide the AV setup and PA system support for the welcome ceremony. Most councils have existing relationships with local Elders for this purpose.
Free reschedule within 6 months at operator discretion. Booking deposit remains non-refundable. Decision is made the morning of the event based on Bureau of Meteorology forecasts. Wind threshold is 35 km/h sustained, above which we deflate and reschedule. We also work with councils to maintain a Plan B indoor venue where possible for school holiday programmes.
Yes, brief post event check in within 3 business days. Includes estimated attendance from operator observation, operational notes, confirmation pack down was complete and venue returned to original condition, and invoice for the event. For detailed audience surveys, demographic research or formal evaluation, councils can engage external services separately.
Saturday evenings in October to December and March to April book up 8 to 12 weeks ahead during peak season. Australia Day, Christmas and Easter programmes should be confirmed 3 to 6 months ahead. Mid week events and off peak season events can usually be confirmed 4 to 6 weeks ahead. For Summer Series programmes, ideal planning window is 6 to 9 months before the first event.
Yes, with travel charged per kilometre from Kwinana. We have delivered for the Shire of Murray and regularly service Mandurah, Pinjarra, the broader Peel region and South West Perth. Beyond a 100km radius travel costs may make a Summer Series unviable, but single events and Trio programmes remain practical for most regional WA councils.
Inflatable cinema screen, high brightness projector, professional sound system, full setup before the event, on site event management throughout, full pack down after, and backup projector and amplifier on every event. The fee does not include film public performance licensing, portable toilets, audience lighting or first aid, which are typically council requirements at varying attendance thresholds.
50 percent booking deposit on contract signing, balance due 7 days before each event. For Summer Series programmes, council can choose event by event invoicing or pay the full programme upfront. Standard net 14 day invoice terms. We can accommodate council standard procurement and payment processes.
Yes. Council representatives, councillors, mayor and elected officials all attend free as part of the standard council event setup. Crew supports any council communications team requirements including site access for photography and video. Council retains all photo and video rights from the event for use across council channels.

Ready to plan your council outdoor cinema programme?

Single event, Trio Programme, Summer Series or Annual Partnership. Real pricing, real past council experience, $10M public liability insured.

Response within 24 business hours.

Working on a council programme? Share this guide with the events team.
Alexander, co founder of Perth Pop-Up Movies
Written by

Alexander

Co founder of Perth Pop-Up Movies. 25 years of audio visual and event delivery experience. Delivered for the Shire of Murray and regularly works with Perth metro councils, schools and community organisations. Fully insured Western Australian business, $10 million public liability cover.

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Perth Pop-up Movies