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There is a small four screen Odeon cinema in the town, located opposite the town hall; however, there are plans to build a new multiplex cinema as part of the Priory Quarter development in the town centre. The town has an independent cinema called the Electric Palace located in the Old Town and a restored cinema in St Leonards called the Kino ...
View of Hastings Old Town from the East Hill. Hastings Old Town is an area in Hastings, England, roughly corresponding to the extent of the town prior to the nineteenth century. It lies mainly within the easternmost valley of the current town. The shingle beach known as The Stade (the old Saxon term meaning "landing place") is home to the ...
Electric Cinema, York, a former ... a former cinema in York, in England This page was last edited on 24 December 2022, at 22:54 (UTC). Text is available under the ...
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Interior of the Electric Cinema Notting Hill, May 2013 In the late 1990s the site was acquired by local property developer, European Estates and architects, Gebler Tooth. Four years of planning followed in which Gebler Tooth developed the plan that would re-establish the commercial viability of the theatre.
121 All Saints Street Hastings is a Grade II listed building [1] in the Conservation Area of Hastings Old Town, East Sussex, England. It was built in 1648, is timber-frame, jettying to the front and side, and with a dragon beam, and bears the crest of Sir James Duke, 1st Baronet [2]. It is one of the best preserved half-timbered houses in Hastings.
Wotton Electric Picture House (also known as Wotton Cinema and previously The Town Cinema [1]) is a cinema in Wotton-under-Edge, Gloucestershire, England. The cinema hosts one screen, with a laser projector. [2] Originally opening in 1913, it has been under the management of The Electric Picture House Cinema Ltd. since 2014. The cinema is one ...
The Electric Palace cinema, Harwich, is one of the oldest purpose-built cinemas to survive complete with its silent screen, original projection room and ornamental frontage still intact. It was designed by the architect Harold Ridley Hooper of Ipswich, Suffolk [ 1 ] [ 2 ] and opened on 29 November 1911.