Loew's New Rochelle Theatre

595 Main Street,
New Rochelle, NY 10801

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Josh Karpf
Josh Karpf on September 21, 2021 at 9:21 am

Many astonishing period and demolition photos at https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?vanity=howvideo1&set=a.1643325715850740 , posted this past January.

stang119
stang119 on August 7, 2017 at 12:07 pm

The theatre has been demolished but the facade and marquee remain as you can see in photo I added. You can see right through. Please replace picture on home page with one showing theatre in it’s glory.

robboehm
robboehm on April 26, 2017 at 9:46 pm

Uploaded a companion photo to the original proposal which would have incorporated the Loew’s marquee.

Matt Lambros
Matt Lambros on April 26, 2017 at 2:17 pm

Seth Pinksy was one of the people who helped get the Loew’s Kings in Brooklyn restored. It’s sad that he also helped another former Loew’s theater be destroyed.

Joseph
Joseph on April 26, 2017 at 11:33 am

Nov 30, 2016:

NEW ROCHELLE – Construction will begin next week on the centerpiece of the city’s $4 billion development plan as officials continue to look for ways to reshape the downtown, including ideas for a new library and more high-rises.

A $120 million, 28-story mixed-use building at 587 Main St. will be located at the site of the historic former Loews Theater. It will include 280 apartments — 28 of which will be affordable spaces — a 10,000-square-foot entertainment space including a “black box” theater, 17,000 square feet of commercial space and a 234-space parking garage. Long Island-based firm RXR is the developer.

“This project demonstrates that the visionary downtown plan we adopted last December is working,“ New Rochelle Mayor Noam Bramson said. "It’s just one part of a larger transformation — the most ambitious in our history and the most exciting in the Hudson Valley.”

City officials approved a master development agreement in December 2014 with RDRXR, consisting of RXR and firm Renaissance Downtowns. In December 2015, the City Council passed a new zoning plan that would make a downtown overhaul possible.

RDRXR’s proposed 10-year downtown revitalization plan could add one million square feet of retail, 2.4 million square feet of office space, 1,200 hotel rooms and nearly 6,400 residential units.

“This project, along with many others, is powerful evidence that the new opportunities and potential in New Rochelle are now seen clearly by the development and investment community far and wide,“ Bramson said.

Joseph
Joseph on April 26, 2017 at 11:26 am

This theatre has now been demolished for retail and housing re-development. I am not sure if any of the façade was saved. More details to follow

Bumpkis
Bumpkis on July 2, 2016 at 12:52 am

Loews Theater project design includes replica of 1920s marquee Christopher J. Eberhart, 3:08 p.m. EDT June 3, 2016

City Historian Barbara Davis praised RXR Realty’s proposed plans for a 28-story, mixed-use development that includes a replica of the original 1920s marquee

NEW ROCHELLE – The proposed $120 million Loews Theater development would usher the city into what officials hope will be a new age of the downtown while paying tribute to its historic past.

The developer RXR Realty was in front of the planning board for the first time Wednesday night to discuss its plans to turn the defunct theater at 587-599 Main St. into a 28-story, mixed-use development with an accompanying black box theater.

Right now the property includes two buildings with frontages along Main Street and Huguenot Street. Seth Pinksy, vice president of RXR, said the new development will be one building with two entrances and a shared lobby.

The historic portion of the property is the facade of the two-story building on Main Street. That was once the entrance to the Loews Theater, which opened in the late 1920s.

City historian Barbara Davis said the theater anchored the downtown of “one of the most prominent cities in the country” during that time.

The facade survived a number of uses since the theater permanently shut its doors in the 1970s, including the failed nightclub, the Palladium, which closed about 15 years ago.

Plans call for the restoration of the original terracotta details and ornamentation of the facade. The current marquee, which is not the original, will be removed and replaced with a replica of the original 1929 marquee, Pinksy said. And none of the original materials or existing architectural elements will be removed.

That will be the entrance to the multipurpose performance space that city officials hope will be the new anchor to the social life of the city’s revitilized downtown.

Davis said she worked with the RXR Realty development team and said she was “pleasantly surprised and pleased” with the plans.

“They’re doing everything right,” Davis said. “I hope this is the signal for things to come because they’re doing everything the right way. If we’re going to have progress, we have to preserve where there’s good character.”

Davis called the buildings along Huguenot Street an example of “bad character.” Currently, it’s apartment buildings and a warehouse.

Pinsky said that the Huguenot Street building will be demolished. A 28-story building with 280 apartments, a 277-space parking garage and retail storefronts will be erected in its place. He said the units will mostly be studio and one-bedroom apartments with a few two-bedroom apartments.

Pinksy didn’t give a rent range but said it will be market value for the area, which he said is cheaper than rents in New York City.

The project could be approved as early next month. Pinksy said he hopes to break ground before the end of the year and be completed within 22 months.

“It’s been a great experience working with the city,” Pinsky said. “Our experience confirms our enthusiasm we had before we started this. The process has worked the way the city said it was going to work.”

DomZ
DomZ on April 24, 2014 at 11:34 pm

This theatre is still standing but redevelopment in this part of New Rochelle is sluggish. It is located across the street from the former Brandt’s Town Theatre that is currently being use as a furniture store in the lobby. The theatre is twinned but could be a nice cultural art’s centre.

svercher
svercher on November 5, 2013 at 2:57 am

hELLO! Please could you tell me how is the interior nowadays? it could be use again as a theater ? thanks

Joseph
Joseph on September 28, 2012 at 5:06 pm

The front facade is now being cleaned back to its shiney white. The box office area remains boarded up. What is going in here?

TLSLOEWS
TLSLOEWS on January 16, 2011 at 11:05 pm

Goggle Maps lists a health store at this address,anyone know,at least the building is still there.

Mike Rogers
Mike Rogers on May 17, 2010 at 9:05 pm

“GANDHI” and"LONE WOLF MCQUADE" can only hope the theatres were separted,but you wouldn’t have any cross over with those two films 100% you wouldn’t.

TLSLOEWS
TLSLOEWS on February 19, 2010 at 6:16 pm

Like the marquee photos with the 70,s style LOEWS sign with the neon in the letters.

marinermc
marinermc on November 10, 2009 at 10:11 am

Facade painted black? Cast stone and terra cotta originally, I’d imagine. Whatever they slapped over the facade has to be wrecking the integrity of the underlying material(s).

poman
poman on June 25, 2008 at 3:32 pm

Not-so-great scan from a newspaper clipping.
View link

Bruce Calvert
Bruce Calvert on December 14, 2007 at 12:11 pm

Here’s an original program from the Loew’s New Rochelle for the week of October 25, 1926. It just lists the address as “Main Street”.
View link

howvideo
howvideo on September 2, 2006 at 8:26 am

Loew’s New Rochelle started showing hard ® movies in the late 70’s such as Flesh Gorden, which most likely lead to its ultimate demise.
Now a defunct night club. It stands vacant on a once lively strip of theaters and night clubs and bowling alley that lead the county in nightlife from the 50 to the early 90. This Part of Main St was the place to cruise