Search

Theaters News Links

Advanced search
 

Theater Guide

Now listing 26,627 theaters & 1,598 photos… more
Browse by...
 

Add Your Cinema Treasure!

Add Theater
Add Photo (offline)
Add Theater News
 
 

Recent Comments

Nov 21 Pirate Drive-In (2)
Nov 21 Rivoli Theater (4)
Nov 21 Rivoli Cinemas (7)
Nov 21 Hollywood Movies… (2)
Nov 21 Thompson Theatre (10)
Nov 21 North Adams… (3)
Nov 21 Okla Theatre (2)
Nov 21 Ritz Theater (7)
Nov 21 Plaza Theatre (6)
Nov 21 State Theatre (2)
 
 
 
  Discover. Preserve. Protect.
Also known as Sony Bay Terrace Sixplex

AMC Loews Bay Terrace 6

Bayside, Queens, NY
211-01 26th Avenue
, Bayside, Queens, NY 11361 United States
(map)
Status: Open
Screens: Multiplex (6 Screen)
Style: Unknown
Function: Movies (First Run)
Seats: 1164
Chain: AMC Theatres
Architect: Unknown
Firm: Unknown
Add a photo for this theater!
This six screen multiplex opened December 1993 as part of the expansion of the busy Bay Terrace shopping Center in the northeastern Queens neighborhood of Bayside. It was intended as a replacement for the two screen (originally a single screener) Loews Bay Terrace Theater, a free standing theater opened in the early 1960s at the corner of 26th Avenue and Bell Boulevard just a few hundred feet to the east. As part of the shopping center expansion, the older theater was converted to retail space and currently houses the chain restaurant Applebee's and a Victoria's Secret women's apparel store.

The new theater was built on some seven acres of vacant land along the western edge of the shopping center that had previously been speculated at various times for condominium and town house development. The structure is actually two stories high, with single story wings built in a U-shaped configuration facing the shopping center. The lower floor is occupied by a variety of shops and eating establishments, representing at the time an increase of 67,000 square feet of retail space for the center. The theater is located in the upper portion of the building and faces its own separate parking lot away from the center. Due to the natural grade in the landscape, the theater's parking lot allows for convenient entry at the second floor level. Patrons actually traverse a short foot bridge from the parking area that spans the loading bay access area for the retail shops on the lower level.

The two-window box office is located flush along the exterior wall of the theater with entrance doors on either side. The doors lead into an atrium lobby that feels a little smaller than it actually is due to the large circular candy counter that occupies most of the space. There are coming attraction display cases against either wall of the lobby along with a couple of small benches and video games for ticket holder convenience. Facing the lobby along the back wall are the rest rooms, which are along the foyer that runs the length of the building and leads to three auditoriums in either direction. Posters from older movies (older as in the 80s and 90s) line the foyer walls.

The ticket taker is usually stationed at the mid-point of the wide threshold from the lobby into the foyer, with the rest of the entryway cordoned off to ensure only ticket holders are permitted. Of course, this means you have to negotiate with the ticket-taker if you need to make a bathroom trip before your theater is ready for seating. The auditoriums are layed out symmetrically, with the two largest screens (302 seats each) at the far end of the foyer and the smaller rooms (140 seats) more towards the center. It's been a while since I attended, but I don't recall that any of the theaters feature stadium style seating, though the rocking chairs are quite comfortable. None of these rooms were constructed for 70mm presentation (since the format was well into its death throes at the time the multiplex was conceived) nor do I think there has been any digital installation.

Interestingly, as with the original 1960s Bay Terrace Theater, Loews is a tenant in the building, rather than an owner all buildings in the shopping center are owned by Cord Meyer Development, the company that first opened the mall in 1960. The entire expansion project including the new theater was budgeted at $20 million when it was announced in May of 1992. I found the original article online at the NY Times website, along with a related article from 1994 about the rising cost of admissions. At the time, Manhattan theaters topped out at $8 for adults, while tickets at the Loews Bay Terrace Sixplex had risen 50 cents to $7.50 as of May 1994.

Adult ticket prices are currently $9.50 with discounts to $7.50 available Monday and Thursday until 6PM and Friday and Sunday (plus Holidays) until 4PM.

Related Websites

AMC Theatres (Official)
Contributed by Ed Solero


YOUR COMMENTS

 
Something got lost in translation when my write-up was posted! I guess using dashes in a sentence only functions in the comments sections - like this, for example. Anyway, the first sentence in the next to last paragraph that opnes with the word "Interstingly" should end with the phrase "rather than an owner." The next sentence should begin "All the buildings in the shopping center..."

Also, the ticket prices discussed at the bottom of the description should read "Monday thru Thursday" and "Friday thru Sunday".

The architectural firm for this project was Stephen Sanders & Associates from Massapequa, Long Island.

Once the weather clears up around these parts, I'll grab a few shots to post.
posted by Ed Solero on Jun 28, 2006 at 5:11am
This is the breakdown on the seat count for this theater:

Theater#1-302
Theater#2-140
Theater#3-140
Theater#4-140
Theater#5-140
Theater#6-302

posted by Lost Memory on Jun 28, 2006 at 5:48am
Thanks Lost. That info is buried in my rather verbose introduction somewhere. The larger theaters at either end of the foyer are my favorites. The others in between are pretty small, though it has been a while since I caught a flick here. Perhaps the screen size makes up for the small rooms. I'm hoping someone can comment on the current quality of presentation here.
posted by Ed Solero on Jun 28, 2006 at 6:19am
Ed....When I have a few hours free, I'll read through your entire description. Just kidding, its a very well written and informative description for this theater. I can't wait to get to the second paragraph. Any sex and violence in the other paragraphs? LOL

posted by Lost Memory on Jun 28, 2006 at 7:00am
You're killing me, Lost! That's ok... breaking them and having them broken is NY way of life! If you know what I mean.
posted by Ed Solero on Jun 28, 2006 at 7:42am
It could be a NY thing Ed. You have to "break 'em" every once in awhile or things become boring. Keep this in mind, I only joke around with people that I like. This is all in good fun.

BTW...Since I never took the Evelyn Wood speed reading course, I just finished the second paragraph. So far, it looks like you have a best seller on your hands. Need an agent? :P

posted by Lost Memory on Jun 28, 2006 at 9:06am
I find the humor on this website makes for a more pleasant atmosphere. I enjoy it very much. I have a question. Is this a safe theatre to take your family to? I was transferred from Indiana to New York City. I have been to New York City many times before on business but never ventured outside of Manhattan. Now that I am living here I would be interested in seeing theatres in the outer boros.
posted by mikemovies on Jun 28, 2006 at 9:40am
Absolutely, mikemovies. Bayside is a great neighborhood. No worries attending this theater. Ditto the multiplex theaters in not too distant Fresh Meadows, College Point or Douglaston (though I'm not a fan of the facilities at Douglaston's Movieworld). Mind you, these are all modern multiplexes and certainly made in cookie-cutter fashion. I would also include the Midway Stadium 9 and Cinemart in Forest Hills and, for some less commercial fare, the Kew Gardens Cinemas.
posted by Ed Solero on Jun 28, 2006 at 10:19am
Lost... I'd like to serialize the introduction in Reader's Digest one day, if I could ever afford the postage to mail them the original manuscript!
posted by Ed Solero on Jun 28, 2006 at 10:21am
Good one, Ed. Maybe next time you should use the Readers Digest condensed version. If you added a few illustrations to your description, a book deal wouldn't be out of the question. The only items that I can find missing from your Pulitzer Prize winning description is the color of the ticket takers hair and the number of seats that had gum stuck under them. Other than that it is a pure work of art! ;)

mikemovies....Welcome to the asylum. If you get tired of the "cinder block" theaters in Queens, you can always checkout the Ridgewood theater while its still open. It has a listing on this site.

posted by Lost Memory on Jun 28, 2006 at 1:28pm
Could we lose the AMC on these theatres until they actually put the Loews name to death, i.e. change the signs? Why rush it?
posted by dave-bronx on Jun 28, 2006 at 9:46pm
Dave-bronx.... this is the way the theater is listed in the local newspapers. When you add a theater, the site form asks for "current name". My intention wasn't to rush anything. Technically, the only "name" to appear on the actual building and pylon sign is "Loews Theaters", with no mention of the name "Bay Terrace" or reference to "6" or "Sixplex". For some period of time in the mid '90's those same signs displayed only the name "Sony Theaters".

posted by Ed Solero on Jun 29, 2006 at 2:01am
I'm sorry, I didn't mean to sound accusatory, it's just that the Loews name will disappear soon enough. They may own the place, but the name on the building and the pylon is still Loews.
posted by dave-bronx on Jun 29, 2006 at 7:38pm
Not at all dave-bronx... I understand your point. I was just going by how the theater is currently listed in the Movie Clocks and newspaper ads. As I said, the two large signs on the building simply read "Loews Theaters" with the familiar spot-light logo. Unlike the former Bay Terrace theater which had a very distinctive 1960's style sign over its entrance that clearly identified the theater as "Loews Bay Terrace". I have a number of photos of the Sixplex taken yesterday morning that I need to upload to photobucket and then I'll post them here.
posted by Ed Solero on Jun 30, 2006 at 5:58am
Here are some shots of the theater I took a couple of mornings ago. There was a custodial worker inside the theater, so I was also able to make it into the vestibule area between the outer and inner entrance doors and snap a couple of images of the lobby through the glass:

View from 26th Ave parking lot
Looking head-on at main facade from theater parking lot
Main facade from foot bridge
Close up of entrance, canopy and box office windows
Lobby concession stand
Lobby left wall
Lobby towards right wall
Rear view from shopping center parking lot
Pylon sign on 26th Ave near corner of Bell

Here's a local.live.com view to give some orientation...

View to the north

You can see the theater parking lot to the left of the building (with footbridge to entrance) and the shopping center lot and storefronts to the right of the multiplex. At the far right of the image near the bottom edge you can make out the old stand-alone Loews theater (now retail) that this multiplex replaced in '93.

posted by Ed Solero on Jul 1, 2006 at 5:18am
Found this small postage-stamp sized image of the theater when it was under the Sony name. I'm guessing this was in the mid '90's (say from '94 or a bit later) not that long after the multiplex opened:

Sony Bay Terrace

posted by Ed Solero on Jul 18, 2006 at 11:08am
I live right down the block from this theatre. Is this theatre being expanded? I see it being under construction.
posted by gerryrules73 on Sep 10, 2007 at 5:33pm
Additional retail space was recently added around this theater, effectively sandwiching the building. It looks odd and obscures the theater, but the new retail space does covers up the long drop to the ground below visible from the bridge leading to the ticket booth.
posted by lyinhart on Mar 7, 2008 at 8:15pm
Actually prices are currently 10 dollars after 4 pm I think and 8 dollars the rest of the day. On Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays as part of AMC's policy all films 1st shows that start before 12 PM are 6 dollars.
posted by dantop500 on May 18, 2008 at 7:33pm
What's this only 3 films this week on just 3 screens? Both Wall-E and Wanted were on 1 screen last weekend. Now Hancock is there but nothing else came in. You mean to tell me they got rid of Get Smart and Kung Fu Panda already!
posted by dantop500 on Jul 1, 2008 at 5:59am
Did you ever wonder if the parent company of a chain wants a theater to fail? The AMC Bay Terrace has only 3 showings a day Monday thru Thursday with nothing starting later than say 8 while its sister theater in Fresh Meadows has late showings. This theater also seems in non blockbuster seasons like winter, spring and fall to get the releases that AMC expects to do the worst at the box office. Fresh Meadows gets the expected hits. If Bay Terrace has a hit it's because of a sleeper film. In the early part of the year the Bay Terrace theater got Gran Torino which is a big hit while Fresh Meadows got Bride Wars and the Unborn. Originally early predictions had Gran Torino making 10 million on the weekend then predictions moved closer to 18, but it actually opened in the upper 20's. Bride Wars which Fresh Meadows got was expected to make 20 and originally the Unborn was to make more tha Gran Torino. Unfortunately for AMC Gran Torino hit. The following week both theaters got Paul Blart: Mall Cop while Fresh Meadows also got Notorious, My Bloody Valentine and Hotel for Dogs all which made over 20 million on the MLK weekend. Bay Terrace got the expansion of Defiance which made about 10 and currently has 22. Last week Fresh Meadows Got #1 Taken (24 million) and The Uninvited (10 million). Bay Terrace got New in Town, 9th place and 4.479 million. Now this weekend both theaters get 2 more. Fresh Meadows gets both He's Not That Into You and Pink Panther 2, both expected to make 20+ million this weekend. Bay terrace gets Push, expected 11 and Coraline expected 9. Is this deliberate? Bay Terrace is played off like the 5 plex AMC had down the street from the Fresh Meadows which they tore down because the gas station's oil tanks underground leaked. That whole block came down a few years ago except for the gas station. You would think the way they run this theater, the one I go to the most, that AMC wants it to fail.
posted by dantop500 on Feb 5, 2009 at 8:00pm
I guess AMC must be upset since Coraline outperformed expectations and Pink Panther 2 underperformed.
posted by dantop500 on Feb 11, 2009 at 8:01am
Again while we're get the pic to be presumed to be #1 this week, "Race to Witch Mountain", our sister theater in Fresh Meadows gets all 3 openers. We hold Fired Up which was 10th on the weekend and made about 2.5 million for a 4th week and that blockbuster "The Reader" which was #12. Douglaston gets 4 films including limited release Two Lovers. Why are we the stepchild cinema?

I notice outside of myself no one else seems to write about this theater, the last comment being from May 7, 2008.
posted by dantop500 on Mar 12, 2009 at 1:53pm
$10.50 now to see a nightime show so I discovered Saturday when I bought a ticket for Star Trek.
posted by dantop500 on May 10, 2009 at 3:53pm
So we have a breakdown in the ads at the 7:40 showing of "Angels and Demons" which results in everything commencing about 15 minutes late. If that wasn't bad enough the film then breaks down about 10 minutes from the end at a crucial scene. When they resume the film we see the scene and they have Lady Gaga singing "Just Dance', the music coming from the cd's AMC promotes between shows.
posted by dantop500 on May 18, 2009 at 10:41am
Now we have cancelled $6 matinees today May 24 due to supposedly Con Ed fixing outages that apparently the Con Ed website knows nothing about.
posted by dantop500 on May 24, 2009 at 7:21am
dantop500, thats whats wrong with the entire industry today. Big companies like AMC and Regal are killing it. Give me the good old days, like when I started 34 years ago.
posted by movie534 on May 24, 2009 at 7:27am
So 2 new films come out this week and we get nada. The cinema has a list of a number of films you can buy a ticket for, though it does not specifically say they will be at this theater. So Bruno is plugged as opening this week but we didn't get it. Sister theater in Fresh Meadows gets it and I Love You Beth Cooper. What do we get, the return of Taking of Pelham One Two Three which we got rid of last week and now it's back on a double bill with My Sister's Keeper.How do they explain this weirdness?
posted by dantop500 on Jul 7, 2009 at 10:03pm
Another big night here. Went to see "Taking Woodstock" in theater 6 for the 7:50 showing and they have the picture begin at 7:10 because the projectionist mixed the films up. So I missed the first 20 minutes of the film; at least they gave me a pass for a free showing.
posted by dantop500 on Aug 29, 2009 at 7:56pm
I think this is the strangest thing I've seen at this theater while I have been going to it. This beats actually seeing sneak previews here of "Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back" and the "Great Raid" which while sneak previewed here never played regular engagements. Anyway the theater is playing the first Korean disaster movie "Haeundae" which is believe it or not the only cinema in the city playing the film!
posted by dantop500 on Sep 5, 2009 at 3:24pm
"Hauendae" now in it's big fourth week here. I saw this opening weekend in theater 1, one of the big screens and there were about 250 people at the showing!
posted by dantop500 on Sep 22, 2009 at 7:54pm
Comment
*

Notify me when someone replies to my comment?
Note: Please read our comment policy before posting. Comments which are off-topic, obscene, spam, or personal attacks will be removed. Help us keep the discussion productive!