What about the native Americans? |
The non-profit that runs the Avalon also owns it, I believe. So unless they want to cash out or change their model, nothing there is going to change. |
Exactly. Does that make the black DC residents “colonizers”? And what’s this with a DC peoples’ school named after some white European militarist? |
The Uptown Theater is more likely to become the Upscale Towers. DC is changing zoning to allow it to allow 9-floor buildings there. The Uptown facade would stay but nothing else. |
| Not likely 9 stories, but the owners of the building rejected a proposal that would have had the space opened and active a year ago and instead it remains vacant and unused. So if the owners want to redevelop it, or make it into something else, that is their perogative. |
Avalon is not Uptown. |
It will likely suffer the same fate as the Penn Theater on Capitol Hill, which was nicely restored with multi-family residential or offices on top, but no more movies. I really hope someone with deep pockets reopens the Uptown as a working movie palace. It was DC’s last intact single screen theater and an incredible place to watch movies. Indie films could definitely fill a niche there. Even a dinner theater would be nice, like the Greek-themed ABBA one (Mama Mia the Party) that sells out in Stockholm every single night. |
the movie theater industry is not a growth industry |
There is a solid business plan, developed by an industry insider, for a nonprofit to run it as a film and arts venue with a ground floor restaurant. Unfortunately the Uptown owners rejected the plan in favor of some other unidentified tenant - a year ago. Since then, it’s been crickets from the Uptown owners, leading to speculation that they are letting the Uptown sit empty until there is upzoning and they can flip the property to a developer. |
| The uptown is still a landmark in a historic district, so even with upzoning, the adaptive re-use oppportunities will be limited. |
I saw Ford vs Ferrari at the Uptown and it was a pretty bad movie experience. Horribly uncomfortable chairs and terrible audio. It needed a fairly substantial overhaul regardless. However, movie theatres are a dying business. Dinner theatre also isn’t particularly popular. |
Good thing it's owned by a NON-PROFIT then... |