In recent weeks there had been
rumors that some AMC locations, including the one on Third Avenue at 11th Street, were at risk of closing because of a potential bankruptcy filing.
However,
according to published reports, AMC — the largest network of theaters in the country — has announced it plans to raise $500 million, improving its liquidity and pushing the threat of bankruptcy to the background.
As the
Commercial Observer reported on Friday, AMC Entertainment skipped rent in April after closing all its 1,000 theaters globally in March and furloughing 26,000 workers in the United States, or 96 percent of its workforce. Their theaters are expected to remain closed through June, with hopes of a partial reopening later in the summer, according to
reports.
A joint venture of ABS Partners Real Estate and Benenson Funding is AMC's landlord in the East Village, where the theater chain has a ground lease through July 2037.
The seven-screen theater is in the corridor south of Union Square that preservationists have worried will turn into a "
Silicon Alley" thanks to the zoning change made for
the mayor's tech hub on 14th Street.
This prime real-estate sits near the new
Moxy East Village hotel. The Nathaniel, a 9-story luxury rental,
arrived right next door in 2014.
I was never really a fan of the rather cinder-blocky theater, but have grown to like it in the past year or so for mainstream films. On the downside, even after
the 2015 renovation the lobby is too cramped — lines for tickets and concessions spill into one another — and the carpet pattern can cause seizures.
Still, it's more comfortable and
seemingly less crowded than, say, the Regal Cinemas at Union Square or Essex Crossing — locations where people think it's OK to have animated conversations throughout a movie.
Loews opened the theater on May 24, 1991 on the site of a one-story parking garage that had been built in 1868 as headquarters for the NYC Department of Public Charities and Corrections,
per Cinema Treasures.
And here's a late-1970s look at the block via a photo by Mark Kane that
I stole from Jeremiah Moss ... before the theater and the luxury rentals with the Westside Market...
H/T Upper West Sider!
Previously on EV Grieve:
Report: Pretty ugly AMC Village 7 building sells for $32 million