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Later that year, they opened the first phase of the $300 million Rockville Center project, which included renovated and expanded theaters and a "restaurant row." [6] Starting in 2004, redevelopment continued with the 60-acre (240,000 m 2) Rockville Town Center project. The $370 million mixed use center, is a public / private venture and ...
Pike & Rose now comprises 379,000 sq ft (35,200 m 2) of retail, 864 residential units, a 177-room hotel, and just under 300,000 sq ft (28,000 m 2) of class-A office space. Retail anchors include REI, West Elm, and Uniqlo. [1] [2] Amp by Strathmore, a 200-seat music venue, was adjacent to an iPic movie theater and closed at the end of June 2024. [3]
It is the oldest operating movie theater in central Maryland and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a designated Baltimore City Landmark. Managers Buzz and Kathleen Cusack renovated the theater and reopened it on October 15, 2010. [2] The theater closed again for more renovations on April 26, 2012.
To transmit the series via satellite simulcast in the US and Canada, the Met has partnered with Fathom Events.The series is broadcast to AMC Theatres, Cinemark, Cineplex Entertainment, Regal Entertainment Group (Regal Cinemas, United Artists and Edwards), Goodrich, Kerasotes, Marcus and National Amusements movie theaters as well as a series of independent venues such as arts centers and ...
White Flint Mall was a shopping mall, located along Rockville Pike, in Montgomery County, Maryland, that closed in early 2015 and demolished thereafter. Its former anchors were Lord & Taylor, Bloomingdale's, Dave & Buster's, H&M, Loews Theatre and Borders, the last four of which acted as junior anchors for the mall. Lord & Taylor, the mall's ...
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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.
It was at the time the most modern theater in Baltimore, superseded in 1939 by another Zink cinema, the Senator Theatre.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.