East Bend Twin Drive-In
9897 Ohio 125,
Russellville,
OH
45168
9897 Ohio 125,
Russellville,
OH
45168
2 people favorited this theater
Additional Info
Previous Names: East Bend Drive-In
Nearby Theaters
The East Bend Drive-In was located on State Route 125 in Russellville. It opened in August 2000. On March 13, 2001 the screen was destroyed by a thunderstorm. Repairs were carried out and it re-opened on July 4, 2002. A second screen was added in mid-2005. It was closed at the end of the 2012 season and was demolished by the end of 2012.
Contributed by
Bill Eichelberger
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Recent comments (view all 9 comments)
Change address to:
9897 Ohio 125, Russellville, OH 45168 United States
To make the map link work. Satellite view must be pre-2001, but the street view looks like 2 old screens on site. Found the entrance here, site still under construction, sigh says Opening Soon.
View link
Never mind, found the screens on the overhead view. Hard to spot when there is no defined rows at all. The big old pond threw me off….
PLEASE CHANGE NAME TO WHAT MARQUEE READS:
east bend TWIN drive-in.
PLEASE CHANGE ADDRESS TO:
9897 OHIO 125.
Google Map shows the entire United States when HIGHWAY is used, but shows the correct location when OHIO is used.
“got photos or info?”
http://www.flickr.com/photos/wallyum/4642386437/
Intresting photo Wallyum.
Status should be closed.
A 2012 aerial shows the both screens in bad shape. By 2013, both screens appear to have been removed.
Shortly before the East Bend Drive-In started construction in 1998, former WCPO-TV staff engineer David Schwarberg of Hamilton, Ohio, originally planned on constructing a drive-in theater in Maysville, Kentucky but the land deal fell through. Schwarberg immediately then found an ideal piece of farm land across the Ohio River near Decatur.
Schwarberg opened up the East Bend Drive-In along with his manager Wally Kemmeyer during a weekend of August 2000 as a single-screen drive-in. Schwarberg replied that what’s weird about the East Bend Drive-In is that the concession stand is in a tent rather than an actual building, and its ticket booth was located inside the owner’s barn. Another weird fact is that there are no strips of traces being found, as Google Earth shows only the screen (later screens), the barn, and the projection booth which was its actual small booth building.
But unfortunately on March 13, 2001, its 100x50ft screen was completely destroyed by severe thunderstorms. Schwarberg did not have any money to rebuild, so area residents and officials came to the rescue organizing bake sales and other fundraisers in order to rebuilt the screens.
On the 4th of July 2002, the East Bend Drive-In reopened its gates with an 80x40ft screen and two radio frequencies for sound (88.1 and 95.5 FM). According to Schwarberg, they replied that the current films they screened were not as bright and it takes a lot of light to project the screen. A second screen was added in mid-2005.
The East Bend Twin Drive-In closed after the 2012 season and was demolished a short time later that same year.
It’s now reverted back to farmland