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Flat(ened) screen? Road imperils Regal renovation

by Dave McNair
published 12:06pm Friday May 1, 2009

elevation-regal-seminoleWhat the outside of the new Regal Seminole Trail Stadium 9 will look like .
COURTESY REGAL ENTERTAINMENT GROUP

Regal Entertainment Group announced May 1 the renovation of its four-screen theater behind Kmart, adding five additional screens and renaming it Regal Seminole Trail Stadium 9. However, the biggest shocker of this whole enterprise— besides the fact that America was so over-screened a decade ago that most of the major chains (including Regal itself) declared bankruptcy— is that this site has been targeted for a road.

Although technically still in the planning stages, the proposed $30.5 million Hillsdale Drive Extension has already claimed the old Terrace Triple Theater and the Detail Express Car Wash, which were demolished in 2007. The City has also been in talks with Whole Foods about building Hillsdale Drive’s Hydraulic Road entrance.

onarch-hillsdaleplanThe latest design for the Hillsdale Drive project shows the proposed road running through the Regal Cinema property.
FROM HILLSDALE DRIVE PROJECT WEBSITE

According to a business impact study on the roadway, the Regal would be “negatively impacted the most by the new traffic pattern…with an estimated reduction of 20 percent in sales.” Most notably, a preferred pathway appears to run through the Regal and eliminate a third of the theater’s parking. In addition, the report says, the “increased traffic congestion will likely deter movie-goers.”

However, according to Regal marketing VP Russ Nunley, the company has been “looking for years” for a new theater location, but finally decided to improve on its existing location.

The new theater would include stadium seating, high-back recliner seats, a new lobby, an indoor box-office, kiosks for automated ticket buying, digital surround sound and  3D projection systems, and retractable cup holders to allow for “love seat” seating. Concerts, opera, Broadway shows, and sporting events might be added.

Of course, such plans could have strategic benefits too. While Nunley says that Regal has been aware of “some kind” of proposed road plan— information on the project, including the impact study, is readily available online at www.hillsdaledrive.org— he says the company has never been contacted about an approved design plan or a timeline.

“We got tired of waiting,” says Nunley.  “Since Regal owns the land, we can begin the process and apply for permits this month.”

Despite the findings in the study, Nunley expressed hope that the proposed road project would enhance access to the new theater. Nunley says that opening date will be determined by the local permitting process.

floor-plan-regal-seminoleFloor plan for the new theater.
COURTESY REGAL ENTERTAINMENT GROUP

“The ball will be in their court,” he says. “We want to make this a reality as quickly as possible.”

According to Charlottesville Tomorrow, which first broke the story about the road grabbing at least part of the Regal back in November 2007, the state and federal funding that the City is counting on for the Hillsdale Drive project won’t be available until at least 2015. In addition, City development services manager Angela Tucker tells CT that the City isn’t yet authorized to acquire any rights of way.

“We are bound by a VDOT timeline for state and federal funding so this announcement [from Regal] makes the process more challenging,” says City spokesperson Ric Barrick. ” We have no plan submission to date so it’s not prudent to speculate on how we may need to adjust the current Hillsdale route.”

Public hearings on the design of the project are scheduled for later this year, Tucker told CT.

—last updated Tuesday, May 5 at 1:32pm

Terrace Theater scheduled for demolition

by Dave McNair
published 1:26am Tuesday Jan 23, 2007

cover0315.jpgIn the Hook’s April 15, 2004 cover story, “Recent passed: Will groovy structures be landmarks?“, preservationist Christine Madrid French, president of the Recent Past Preservation Network, cited the Terrace Theater as one of the unlikely jewels of modernist architecture in Charlottesville. In fact, a striking image of the old theater on Hydraulic Road, which has been closed for almost seven years, appeared on the cover (left). In addition, the building served as one of the show pieces in the story about the importance of recognizing the historic and architectural value of the City’s more modern buildings.

“This is a lot like a theater I’m trying to save in Berkeley,” said French of the Terrace, “but the Berkeley place has been a porn theater, and nobody wants to save a porn theater.”

Apparently, no one is interested in saving the Terrace either.cover-terracetriple.jpg

According to Neighborhood Development Services staff, R. S. Woodson Excavating Inc. has applied for a permit to demolish the theater, located at 1801 Hydraulic Road. Although the permit has not yet been approved, City Preservation and Design Planner Mary Joy Scala has already determined that the property is not designated historic, which leaves little doubt the theater will see the wrecking ball sometime soon.

The theater stands in the way of the proposed Hillsdale Connector.

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