Concentration F
Well-known member
Visited with LiamCH and James, cheers guys. This was my first cinema exploration and I was dead excited, but left feeling that it hadn't quite lived up to expectations. First of all it was in a really bad state - what was i expecting i suppose? There is some fire damage to different parts of the building and the 2nd screen has been completely striped with only 1 row of seats left in there. Secondly it was pitch black (again, what was i expecting!) and i don't have a seperate flashgun. Therefore i had to use the on camera flash or lightpaint each shot...not ideal. I think a return visit is needed once i've invested in a decent flash.
Anyway some info on the buiding:
Opened in 1937, the cinema was built as an Odeon by the architects Andrew Mather and Horace Ward. Andrew Mather collaborated with Harry Weedon and Thomas Braddock on the Odeon circuit’s famous black granite flagship building in Leicester Square that opened the same year. The cinema has an eye-catching white façade that can be categorized in the best tradition of British modernism and the protruding glazed stair-tower strongly resembles the Grade I listed De La Warr Pavilion in Bexhill. Amazingly the striking minimal interior has also survived and retains its original concealed lighting in the plasterwork bands across the stepped-down ceiling as well as its circular grilles. The auditorium had seating capacity of 1480 when it first opened. It only closed for cinema use in 2000.
Now an application has been permitted that uses the auditorium as a children’s soft play area retaining all inside features that make this building so special. "This is really a major victory! For two years now we have been battling these unacceptable changes. Stripped of everything on its interior, the building would have been unrecognizable as a cinema. We hope that the building work will commence soon" says Richard Gray, Chair of Casework who is thrilled that the new plans will keep and even restore the cinema in its entirety.
This info was obviously cut and pasted from a website i found so not sure if they're still planning to turn it into a kiddies playpen! Seems a strange choice.
On with the pics, i'll prob put some more up soon after I've sorted through them properly.
The Main Lobby:
Ticket Booth:
Stairways:
Main Screen (very hard to lightpaint!)
Balcony Chairs:
There were LOADS of cobwebs:
Part of the ventilation:
Batteries:
Projection room hole, sadly no projector
The place must have been used to host free parties!:
View from roof:
I'll put more photos on my http://www.flickr.com/photos/edwardfield soon
Anyway some info on the buiding:
Opened in 1937, the cinema was built as an Odeon by the architects Andrew Mather and Horace Ward. Andrew Mather collaborated with Harry Weedon and Thomas Braddock on the Odeon circuit’s famous black granite flagship building in Leicester Square that opened the same year. The cinema has an eye-catching white façade that can be categorized in the best tradition of British modernism and the protruding glazed stair-tower strongly resembles the Grade I listed De La Warr Pavilion in Bexhill. Amazingly the striking minimal interior has also survived and retains its original concealed lighting in the plasterwork bands across the stepped-down ceiling as well as its circular grilles. The auditorium had seating capacity of 1480 when it first opened. It only closed for cinema use in 2000.
Now an application has been permitted that uses the auditorium as a children’s soft play area retaining all inside features that make this building so special. "This is really a major victory! For two years now we have been battling these unacceptable changes. Stripped of everything on its interior, the building would have been unrecognizable as a cinema. We hope that the building work will commence soon" says Richard Gray, Chair of Casework who is thrilled that the new plans will keep and even restore the cinema in its entirety.
This info was obviously cut and pasted from a website i found so not sure if they're still planning to turn it into a kiddies playpen! Seems a strange choice.
On with the pics, i'll prob put some more up soon after I've sorted through them properly.
The Main Lobby:
Ticket Booth:
Stairways:
Main Screen (very hard to lightpaint!)
Balcony Chairs:
There were LOADS of cobwebs:
Part of the ventilation:
Batteries:
Projection room hole, sadly no projector
The place must have been used to host free parties!:
View from roof:
I'll put more photos on my http://www.flickr.com/photos/edwardfield soon