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Chesapeake Square is a 717,282 square feet (66,637.7 m 2) regional mall in Chesapeake, Virginia, in the Hampton Roads metropolitan area. The mall has approximately 70 stores, two anchors Cinemark Theatres and Target ), several eateries at the mall's food court including 2 restaurants: Big Woody's and Twisted Crab (located at the mall's main entry).
Greenbrier Mall is a nearly 900,000 sq ft (84,000 m 2) regional mall in Chesapeake, Virginia, United States in the Hampton Roads metropolitan area. The mall has a hillside terrain, with entries on both upper and lower levels. It serves communities on the east coast in the states of Virginia and North Carolina. [2]
Commodore Theatre is an historic movie theater located at Portsmouth, Virginia. It was built in 1945 in the Streamline Art Deco style, and originally sat 1,000 people. [ 3 ] The theater closed in 1975 and sat empty until a change in ownership and extensive renovation beginning in 1987. [ 3 ]
Colonial Theatre, also known as The Colonial Center for the Performing Arts, is a historic movie theater located at South Hill, Mecklenburg County, Virginia. It was built in 1925, and housed in a three-story brick building done in the Commercial Style . [ 3 ]
Marquee Cinemas is a chain of movie theaters in the Eastern United States. Locations. Cape Coral, Florida; Glasgow, Kentucky; Toms River, New Jersey; New Hartford ...
Pitts Theatre, also known as the State Theatre after 1970, is a historic movie theater located at Culpeper, Culpeper County, Virginia. It was built in 1937–1938, and is a concrete block structure faced in brick in the Art Deco style. The building consists of a symmetrical three-bay façade, with a central theater entrance flanked by ...
In 2000, an 18-screen Cinemark movie theater also opened on the site of the former Leggett/Belk. [11] [12] Thor Equities bought the mall in 2002 [13] and renamed it The Gallery at Military Circle while continuing mall-wide renovation. [4] Ross Dress for Less opened in 2004, taking space previously occupied by a McCrory dime store. [14]
The Byrd Theatre is a cinema in the Carytown neighborhood of Richmond, Virginia. It was named after William Byrd II, [3] the founder of the city. The theater opened on December 24, 1928 to much excitement and is affectionately referred to as "Richmond’s Movie Palace". Though equipped with a Wurlitzer pipe organ, the theatre was also one of ...