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Unfinalized redevelopment proposal plans include relocating the Lakeforest Transit Center and Park and Ride from alongside Lost Knife Rd. to Russell Ave., townhouses, office buildings, a parking garage near the center of brand new stores, a movie theater, cleaning up the three ponds to have a boardwalk built on top, and among others. [9] [49]
The Bethesda Theatre, constructed in 1938, is a historic Streamline Moderne movie theater located at 7719 Wisconsin Avenue (), Bethesda, Maryland, United States.It is a multi-level building composed of rectangular blocks: an auditorium block and a lower street-front lobby and entrance block, including shops.
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Bengies was opened on June 6, 1956 [1] [2] by Frog Mortar Corporation. [3] It was designed by Jack K. Vogel as one of three drive-ins in the Vogel Theatre chain, [1] and is still owned by the Vogel family, [4] [5] and as of 2009 showed entirely double features, [6] with triple features on weekends as of 2014.
The theater will be renamed the Stavros Niarchos Foundation Parkway Film Centre and will contain three screens, six hundred twenty seats, and a live performance area, the main auditorium will have a seating capacity of 420 seats and the new building next door will contain two smaller 100-seat theatres bringing the total number of seats to 620.
It was at the time the most modern theater in Baltimore, superseded in 1939 by another Zink cinema, the Senator Theatre. [2] During the 1960s the Ambassador was a first-run cinema, showing movies immediately upon release, as opposed the second and third-run theaters more typical of the outer portions of Baltimore.
The Maryland Theatre was designed by architect Harry E. Yessler of Hagerstown, in association with prominent theater architect Thomas W. Lamb of New York. Interior design was by Arthur Brounet of New York. The contractor was George Wolfe of Hagerstown. [2] The original facade of the theater at 21-25 South Potomac Street was a five-story ...