Screenland Armour
408 Armour Road,
North Kansas City,
MO
64116
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Screenland (Official)
Additional Info
Architects: Arthur S. Keene, Leslie B. Simpson
Functions: Bar, Movies (First Run), Restaurant
Styles: Spanish Renaissance
Previous Names: Armour Theatre, Centre Theatre, Paradise Theatre
Phone Numbers:
Box Office:
816.421.9700
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News About This Theater
- Mar 2, 2013 — Three key technologies drive evolution in movie theater industry
- May 23, 2008 — Refurbished Screenland Armour Theatre opens today
- Nov 12, 2007 — New owner for Paradise
- Oct 30, 2007 — Armour Theatre in N. Kansas City gets abatements from city
- Aug 31, 2007 — Kansas City's Screenland owner buys Armour Theater
Designed in a Spanish Revival style by noted Kansas City architects Keene & Simpson, the Armour Theatre opened in September 1928 with 650 seats. It reopened as the Center Theater on December 25, 1963.
In 1984 it operated as a live theatre, known as the Paradise Theatre. It was renovated and reopened in February 2008 by the independent Screenland chain. Now seating 300 station seats, with a selection of red leather loungers. The Screenland Armour now serves food and drinks with the movies.
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Recent comments (view all 15 comments)
The Kansas City Star reported on August 22, 2007, that the City of North Kansas City has sold the Paradise (Armour) Theater to Butch Rigby, who operates the Screenland Theaters in the area.
http://www.kansascity.com/115/story/243282.html
Link will probably go dead at some point. Here are highlights:
Historic North Kansas City theatre building to be sold
By MIKE RICE
The Kansas City Star
“Local cinema owner Butch Rigby plans to buy and renovate the Armour Theatre Building, which also has been known as the Paradise Theatre and the Northland Opry. Local movie theater owner Butch Rigby plans to purchase the historic Armour Theatre Building in North Kansas City.
Under an agreement approved by the North Kansas City Council, Rigby will buy the single-screen theater at 408 Armour Road and adjacent two-story properties, which are part of the theater building, for $600,000.
Rigby, operator of the Screenland Crossroads Theatre at 17th and Washington streets and owner of the Screenland Granada in Kansas City, Kan., said Wednesday that he would restore the building, which the city has owned since 2005.
He said he plans to operate a business “very similar†to the other Screenland theaters."
Rigby has a personal connection to the theater building.
‘“I grew up in Liberty and remember coming down to this theater when it was called the Centre Theatre,’ Rigby said.
The theater, which was also known as the Paradise Theatre, was built in 1928 and was one of the Northland’s most popular single-screen cinemas. The cinema closed in the ’80s.
Until recently, the theater was a live country music venue known as the Northland Opry.
The city purchased the building as part of an effort to better control economic development along Armour Road. Last year, it hired the Helix/Architecture & Design firm to draw up a feasibility plan for the building’s future uses.
The city had planned to renovate the building but put those plans on hold last summer after Helix’s recommendations for restoration came in at $5 million, which was $3 million more than what the city had budgeted.
About that time, Mayor Gene Bruns said he was approached by Rigby, who had been told about the city’s efforts to restore the theater by a local developer.
Since then, Rigby and North Kansas City have been negotiating a deal.
“Mr. Rigby is an exceptional person,†Bruns said. “He is a proven product who loves theater and has a history of success with these types of projects.â€
The development agreement calls for Rigby to receive Chapter 353 tax abatements over a 10-year period to help pay for the restoration. In order to receive such tax abatements, the North Kansas City Council would have to declare the theater property blighted and schedule a public hearing.
City Attorney Tom Barzee said no date has yet been set for the public hearing. The amount of tax abatements has not been determined, he said."
The Kansas City Star reported on Oct. 27 that the historic Armour Theatre in N. Kansas City, Missouri will receive a tax abatement of $600,000 for renovation of the building—almost half the cost of the restoration.
The Star article reported:
“The North Kansas City Council this week approved a redevelopment plan for the Armour Theatre building.
The redevelopment agreement calls for building owner Butch Rigby to receive property tax abatements over a 10-year period to help pay for the restoration. To allow the issuance of those tax abatements, the council officially declared the building a blighted property."
Butch Rigby is a local theater operator of Screenland, and known for restoring the historic Granada Theater in Kansas City, Kansas, which is an atmospheric theater designed by the Boller Brothers, then a local firm.
The Star article also reported:
“'I believe very strongly in how beautiful this building is and how it will be an important part of this community,†Rigby told the council. “I want to make it something that you can be proud of again.'
Rigby operates the Screenland Crossroads Theatre at 17th and Washington streets, which used to be a frozen-food storage facility. He also runs the Screenland Granada in Kansas City, Kan.
Rigby purchased the Armour Theatre Building from the city for $600,000 in August. He plans a $1.4 million renovation that will restore the single-screen cinema, which stopped showing movies more than 20 years ago."
While the Granada Theater restoration was lauded by the local community, the theater struggles to find an audience.
The Armour Theatre was also known as various times as the Centre and Paradise Theater. It seated between 650 and 700 people. It was most recently used as a live performance theater for a country and western music show called the Northland Opry.
Kansas City Star article (link may go dead at some point)
http://www.kansascity.com/115/story/335241.html
New website including an old picture:
http://www.screenland.com/theatre/armourindex.html
The new Marquee is up! The Theatre will reopen May 22, 2008 (Think: Indiana Jones!)
Thanks Butch. Everyone is looking forward to having the theater open.
The new marquee looks great. Can’t wait to see it lit up.
Story in the Kansas City Star on reopening of the Armour (formerly Paradise) Theater.
http://www.kansascity.com/115/story/627185.html
Theatre opened on 6 Sep 1928 with the film,“Warming Up”,starring Richard Dix and Jean Arthur.It reopened as the Centre Theatre on 25 Dec 1963 and was renamed the Paradise in 1984.
Now has 2 screens for movies.
This reopened as Centre on December 25th, 1963 and reopened as Paradise on March 16th, 1984. Ads in the photo section.