Clayton Drive-In

124 Clayton Road,
Narrogin, WA 6312

250 cars

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Clayton Drive-In

Located on Clayton Road with an entrance off Floyed Street. The Clayton Drive-In opened on 4th June 1960. The drive-in closed arounf 1993. The screen was taken down on 23rd May 2000(Narrogin Observer - 24th May 2000 - pages 1, and 3.). The rest of the site is still there.

Contributed by David Coppock

Recent comments (view all 6 comments)

davidcoppock
davidcoppock on June 16, 2016 at 1:47 am

The Clayton drive-in(and Clayton Road) might have been named after John Edawrd Clayton, a Narrogin farmer and(Gallipoli veteran?).

davidcoppock
davidcoppock on October 28, 2020 at 2:55 am

Opened on 4/6/1960. 250 cars(1960 t0 1967). 320 cars(1968 to 1970’s). 214 cars(1980’s to circa 1993). Closed in circa 1993.

davidcoppock
davidcoppock on July 18, 2021 at 6:24 am

Exhibitor was Amusu Drive-in Theatres P/L(1960 to 1968), Clayton Drive-in Theatres P/L(1968+), Ace Theatres(early 1980’s to mid 1980’s), Narrogin Community Drive-in(late 1980’s), John Marsden(1991 to 1993).

kennerado
kennerado on July 3, 2022 at 6:34 am

Approximate address is 124 Clayton Rd, Narrogin WA 6312

Richard_D
Richard_D on September 3, 2024 at 3:09 am

I visited in September 2024. I just walked in, as any fence is pretty much gone. I was sad, as it was all looking a bit unloved and decrepit.

The ticket booths are gone, although I could still see where they had been and the concessions building was still standing, although it is now just an empty shell, open to the elements. The interior had been stripped bare - a sign posted outside warned of asbestos removal, so I presume that is why all the walls had been removed.

Another sign declared that entry was only permitted for “Authorised Persons”. As I worked in a drive-in once, I figure that gives me the authority to enter, so I did wander inside to photograph what was left of the old projection room.

The screen is gone, but the old field is still mostly covered with bitumen. It is becoming overgrown, with trees and bushes growing up through the field as nature reclaims the area. There are many speaker posts still extant, I didn’t see any speakers or wiring present.

I have posted some pictures I took while wandering around. It saddens me, but I guess it is better to document these sites, as they do disappear and are gone forever…

Richard_D
Richard_D on September 3, 2024 at 3:09 am

I visited in September 2024. I just walked in, as any fence is pretty much gone. I was sad, as it was all looking a bit unloved and decrepit.

The ticket booths are gone, although I could still see where they had been and the concessions building was still standing, although it is now just an empty shell, open to the elements. The interior had been stripped bare - a sign posted outside warned of asbestos removal, so I presume that is why all the walls had been removed.

Another sign declared that entry was only permitted for “Authorised Persons”. As I worked in a drive-in once, I figure that gives me the authority to enter, so I did wander inside to photograph what was left of the old projection room.

The screen is gone, but the old field is still mostly covered with bitumen. It is becoming overgrown, with trees and bushes growing up through the field as nature reclaims the area. There are many speaker posts still extant, I didn’t see any speakers or wiring present.

I have posted some pictures I took while wandering around. It saddens me, but I guess it is better to document these sites, as they do disappear and are gone forever…

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