620 Elm Street

"She had a nightmare that someone was trying to kill her. That's why we were there, Mom. She just didn't want to sleep alone."

- Nancy Thompson

 is a fictional residence featured in the A Nightmare on Elm Street franchise. It appeared in the original 1984 Wes Craven film A Nightmare on Elm Street. The house was the residence of the Gray family, which consisted of the divorced Mrs. Gray and her fifteen-year-old daughter Tina Gray.

Description & History
At some point in the early 1980s, Tina Gray suffered from a series of nightmares in which she was tormented by a hideously scarred man named Freddy Krueger. On an evening following one of these episodes, Mrs. Gray decided to spend the weekend in Vegas with her boyfriend and left Tina alone in the house. Afraid to be by herself, Tina invited her friends Nancy Thompson and Glen Lantz to spend the night with her. Tina's boyfriend, Rod Lane, invited himself over to their private "slumber party". Having experienced similar nightmares, Rod decided to frighten the group by scraping a garden claw across the outside window. When Glen went into the yard to investigate, Rod tackled him as part of a prank and the two nearly came to blow. Tina and Rod went into her mother's room to have sex, leaving Nancy to sleep in Tina's room while Glen was forced to sleep in another room altogether. After their sexual escapade, Tina and Rod went to sleep. Freddy Krueger attacked Tina, manipulating her body in the real world, levitating it several feet above the bed while slashing her multiple times with his razor glove until she was dead. Nancy and Glen heard her screams, but were unable to get into the locked room. Terrified by what he had seen, Rod Lane quickly ran out of the house.

Points of Interest

 * Living room
 * Tina's room
 * Tina's mother's room

Notes & Trivia

 * The exterior shots of the house were actually filmed at 620 Milwood Avenue in Venice, Los Angeles, California.


 * An actual 620 Elm Street is located in St. Cloud, Florida.