The Film and Television Archive Nitrate Vaults located in the hills of Santa Clarita and is a facility that houses vintage movies in the UCLA Film and Television Archive. Thanks to an extraordinary and ongoing partnership with The Packard Humanities Institute and David Woodley Packard the Archives fragile nitrate film holdings are now housed in state-of the-art vaults. The exterior of the building resembles a type of classical Greek building known as a stoa, an outdoor colonnade structure supported by an impressive row of marble columns. The interior is patterned after the 15th century Convent of Saint Marco in Florence, with offices resembling the cells of a monastery. The UCLA Film & Television Archive is the second largest moving image archive in the United States and the worlds largest university based media archive.