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Belmont Theater

Chicago, IL
1635 W. Belmont Avenue
, Chicago, IL 60657 United States
(map)
Status: Closed/Demolished
Screens: Single Screen
Style: Spanish Baroque
Function: Unknown
Seats: 3265
Chain: Unknown
Architect: Walter W. Ahlschlager
Firm: Unknown
Belmont Theater
A view of the facade of the Belmont, which is all that remains of this theater
Photo courtesy of Bryan Krefft
The Belmont was one of the more popular North Side Chicago movie houses, as it was surrounded by a bustling retail hub and located close to public transportation near the intersection of Belmont, Ashland, and Lincoln Avenues in the Lakeview neighborhood.

The theater opened in 1925 for the Lubliner & Trinz circuit and was taken over by the Balaban & Katz chain in May of 1930. The Belmont was designed by W.W. Ahlschlager, who was also the architect of the Roxy and Beacon Theatres in New York City. This 3200-plus seat palace was originally a venue for both live entertainment and movies, but later turned to movies only.

In the mid 1960s, the movie house was converted into a bowling alley, which it remained until closing in the mid 80s.

In 1996, with the revival of the Lakeview neighborhood in full swing, a mixed condominium and retail complex was built on the site of the Belmont, which was demolished except for its Spanish Baroque style terra-cotta facade.
Contributed by Bryan Krefft


YOUR COMMENTS

 
The exterior and the lobby of the Belmont were quite impressive. Memory, however, tells me the auditorium was not so ornate. Once you entered the foyer, directly in front you, stood a beautiful, overwhelming, marble staircase leading to the balcony. When your eyes finally reached the top of the stairs, you saw (besides the main floor candy counter) another huge candy counter. I was very impressed and what kid wouldn't be. Only the Uptown could match this number of candy counters. The Belmont's gigantic balcony had such depth that if you were seated in the last few rows of the theatre, the top of the screen was cut off. The bottom of the balcony, which was in reality the ceiling above the patrons seated underneath it, had frequently spaced recessed lights. These remained on during the movie and were very annoying. The beautiful marble staircase remained intact after the conversion to a bowling alley. One can comprehend the vastness of the Belmont once it's known there were three floors of bowling alleys.
posted by Richard G. on Jan 22, 2004 at 7:19pm
A 1927 view of the Belmont's marquee (behind a group of young women posing in a car across Belmont Avenue) can be seen in
this photograph. The name of the chain that originally ran the Belmont, Lubliner & Trinz, can just be seen at the top of the marquee.
posted by Bryan Krefft on Jul 23, 2004 at 5:21pm
In the late 20s, the Belmont was one of several Chicago theaters that were part of the Keith-Albee-Orpheum vaudeville circuit, including the State Lake, the Majestic (now the Shubert), the Tower, and the Riviera.
posted by Bryan Krefft on Nov 13, 2004 at 9:46am
Here is a photo of the 1996 demolition of the former Belmont Theater/Belmont Bowl building.
posted by Bryan Krefft on Jan 7, 2005 at 6:42pm
The Belmont Theatre became an Orphuem Circuit Theatre August 1st, 1927.
posted by William on Apr 20, 2005 at 8:38am
Bryan's post above is a link to Midwest Wrecking's website. And I gotta admit, it is a cool site! Many of the photos of their demolition sites have brief histories of the buildings.

On another note, my high school, Gordon Tech, had a bowling team. They played at Waveland Bowl and Belmont Bowl.
posted by PAUL FORTINI on Jan 25, 2006 at 8:44am
Here is a profile from the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency's HAARGIS system. It includes a small picture as the Belmont Bowl.
posted by BWChicago on Jun 17, 2006 at 9:13am
This is another 1927 photo of the Belmont Theater. Similar to the photo Bryan posted on Jul 23, 2004 only its from a different angle. Looks like the same car though.

posted by Lost Memory on Nov 16, 2006 at 9:13am
I remember seeing a photo of the interior as a bowling alley in the Theatre Historical Society of America archives in Elmhurst.

posted by Life's too short on Nov 27, 2006 at 5:24pm
The scaffolding just recently came down after over a year. Looks good. Still missing some Terra Cotta.
posted by BWChicago on Nov 27, 2006 at 5:34pm
Here is information on the Cinema Lofts (the residential portion of the building that replaced the Belmont Theatre) with several photographs. If you click on "View Units for sale in MLS" you get several photos of the facade both with and without the scaffolding up.
posted by Bryan Krefft on Nov 27, 2006 at 5:55pm
The Chicago Belmont Theater maybe lost, but the theater organ that was in this wonderful movie house still lives on. I am a theater organ fan and have done some research on the organ that was in this theater. This theater was home to one of Wurlitzer's Publix 1 style theater organs, or more commonly know as a 'Crawford Special' Wurlitzer in the theater organ world. The organ style was designed by the famous theater organ artist, Jesse Crawford, and consisted of four manuals, and 20 ranks of pipes. This organ style was one of the few common 4 manual Wurlitzer styles to make it out of the early 20th Century alive, as many 4 or even 3 manual original styles have few, or none at all, organs that exist today. The theater organs that played in these theater houses are just as rare as these theaters are. We must do everything that we can to make sure these two great things stay around for a long time to come! Anyhow, I am proud to say that to my knowledge and understanding that the organ that was in this theater still exists, and remains unaltered! In June of 1963 the organ was purchased, and moved to Manitowoc, Wisconsin into a restaurant call 'Castle North' which was designed to house this theater organ. The restaurant went under, and the building and organ was sold to a man by the name of Christopher Feiereisen who last known ran a pipe organ business. He uses the building for storage and to run his business. You can go here to http://theatreorgans.com/wi/manitowoc/castlenorth and see pictures of the restaurant and the organ. The organ still plays and Mr. Feireisen is still welcome to visitors to come see the Belmont Wurlitzer. Well folks here you have it, history on the Belmont's theater organ. I strongly suggest that you stop by and see the organ, more so if you remember going to this theater. Hearing such instruments is quickly becoming a thing of the past, as are these theaters.
posted by jwgregory on Mar 21, 2007 at 5:18pm
AH HA!! I knew that building used to be a theatre! I could tell by the look of it. I can feel the vibes of a movie palace :)
My friend told me "You got theatres on the brain! Anyone can see that was just a decorative old hotel..." HAHA He owes me an apology. :)
posted by Michael Kuecker on Apr 21, 2008 at 5:31pm
In the late `80's, the one time sign for an old club called The Phoenix, sat propped up in the doorway of the shuttered Belmont Theatre.
The Phoenix was a giant bar/club on Broadway between Diversey & Surf. Where Marshall's and all that is now.
It was a deviously large building once you were indoors. It had bars that connected to other bars in endless rooms. And an even larger auditorium like room in the very back. They had different bands in different rooms.
Often Reggae was a standard in one of them. I was there as late as 1982 as I recall. If anyone knows if this was possibly originally a theatre itself, please pass it along. It was on the West side of Broadway, next to a gas station at Surf & Broadway. Across from Round Records, Ranatti's & once a Ponderosa where the Walgreens is at Diversey & Broadway.(I remember that all burned in the winter of 1976. Years before the film "Backdraft", the fire dept. hoses encased a VW in ice, that was illegally parked in front of the hydrant)

There was also a bar called Gaffers on the East side of Broadway, that had windows that opened to the street. They were one of the first bars to utilize sodium vapor lights on their own facade. So it was a visible bright orange from a block away. The city had only then recently converted to SV lamps for the city street lamps. From the old white-ish/green-ish ones. Critics claimed the new SV street lamps caused the trees to continuously grow even at night.
posted by David Zornig on Sep 6, 2008 at 8:36pm
This is getting off-topic, and probably better suited for the Century page, but the Phoenix was known as the Paradise Chicago after 1982, and was said to hold over 1500 dancers at 25,000 sq ft. Before the phoenix closed, it was Country & Western for a while. It had opened in 1975. Before that, it was Ski's Lounge, Thumbs Up, and Poppy's, and after the Paradise it closed from 1985-87, became the Phoenix again (ironically enough), Paramore, Chaplin's Comedy Club (a 600 seat comedy club for about a month in 1991), and Noa Noa. The big room was a converted garage. In 1996 it was all torn down for the large retail and parking garage on the site; initially 16 General Cinemas screens were in this plan, but neighborhood opposition killed it.
posted by BWChicago on Sep 7, 2008 at 9:18am
Reactivate Notification Status.
posted by David Zornig on Apr 14, 2009 at 1:02pm
Theater as bowling alley in 1982:
http://tinyurl.com/d2uo62
posted by ken mc on Apr 18, 2009 at 5:28pm
The Belmont Theatre opened on Sept. 13, 1926 with seating listed at the time of opening at 3,257.
posted by Chuck1231 on Sep 14, 2009 at 9:01pm
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