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In late 2000, Ballston Tower, an adjoining 16-story office tower was completed, with a Regal Cinemas multiplex and retail on the lower levels. [19] In 2003, the triangular surface parking lot in front of Hecht's at the intersection of Glebe Road and Wilson Boulevard was redeveloped, with the construction of 4300 Wilson Boulevard, an 11-story ...
Regal Cinemas (also Regal Entertainment Group) is an American movie theater chain that operates the second-largest theater circuit in the United States, with 6,853 screens in 511 theaters as of December 31, 2021. [3] Founded on August 10, 1989, it is owned by the British company Cineworld and headquartered in Knoxville, Tennessee. [4]
Edwards Theatres is an American movie theater brand owned and operated as an in-name-only unit of Cineworld through its Regal Cinemas chain. Originally founded in 1930 by William James Edwards Jr., it operated independently as a major theater chain in the Southern California region until it was consolidated with Regal Cinemas and United Artists Theatres into the Regal Entertainment Group (REG ...
The Barn Plaza has seen quite a number of changes this year. Marshalls and HomeGoods moved out. The Regal Cinema, Starbucks and Applebee’s closed. ... The former Regal Cinema movie theater in ...
Ballston is a neighborhood in Arlington County, Virginia.Ballston is located at the western end of the Rosslyn-Ballston corridor.It is a major transportation hub and has one of the nation's highest concentrations of scientific research institutes and research and development agencies, including DARPA, the Office of Naval Research, the Advanced Research Institute of Virginia Tech, the Air Force ...
Former DARPA headquarters Virginia Square–GMU station. Virginia Square is a section in the Ballston neighborhood of Arlington County, Virginia.It is centered at the Virginia Square–GMU station on the Orange and Silver lines of the Washington Metro subway system between Clarendon and Ballston.
The "Arlington Cinema 'N' Drafthouse", located at 2903 Columbia Pike, is the only remaining theater in Arlington County, Virginia from the cinema boom period of the 1930s and 1940s that still operates as a movie theater, and is currently one of four movie theaters operating in Arlington County.
In the 1990s, Cinemark Theatres was one of the first chains to incorporate stadium-style seating into their theatres. [25] In 1997, several disabled individuals filed a lawsuit against Cinemark, alleging that their stadium style seats forced patrons who used wheelchairs to sit in the front row of the theatre, effectively rendering them unable to see the screen without assuming a horizontal ...