Ciné-Parc Boucherville
1490 Rue Nobel,
Boucherville,
QC
J4B 8S5
1490 Rue Nobel,
Boucherville,
QC
J4B 8S5
1 person favorited this theater
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- Ce fut l'un des premiers Cine-Parc à être construit au Québec. Il a été ouvert le 3 juillet 1970 par J. Dydzak, qui était propriétaire de Cine-Parc dans l'ouest de l'Ontario. Les amateurs de cinéma ne doivent plus conduire à l'État de New York ou à l'Ontario. Il a ensuite été exploité par les théâtres canadiens et l'Odeon canadien et fermé en 1985.
Il ne faut pas confondre avec l'actuelle Ciné-Parc Boucherville au 1700, rue Effel.
- This was one of the first drive-in’s to be built in Quebec. It was opened on July 3rd, 1970 by J. Dydzak, who owned drive-in’s in western Ontario. No longer did drive-in movie patrons have to drive to New York state or Ontario. It was later on operated by Canadian Theatres and Canadian Odeon and closed in 1985. It was located on Autoroute 20 at Exit 95.
It should not be confused with the current Ciné-Parc Boucherville at 1700 Rue Effel.
Contributed by
MIKE RIVEST
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Recent comments (view all 5 comments)
La carte topographique de 1979 montrant le drive-in ainsi que l'annonce de l'ouverture officielle se trouve dans la section des photos. C'était au 1490, rue Nobel.
1979 topographic map showing the drive-in as well as the grand opening ad can be found in the photo section. This was at 1490 Rue Nobel.
CORRECTION: Ouverture le 3 juillet 1970, le même jour que le CP St-Mathieu. Ils ont été les premiers à s'ouvrir au Québec.
CORRECTION: This opened on July 3rd, 1970, the same day as the CP St-Mathieu. They were the first drive-ins to open in Quebec.
Opened with a cartoon festival and “World safari en francais”.
Some descriptions of the Cine-Parc from the July 27, 1970 issue of Boxoffice: “The drive-in covers about 22 acres of flat land, meaning plenty of space for more than 1,000 cars. There is an 80-foot-long boxoffice building. In the middle of the lot there is a concession stand done in white brick, walnut paneling, orange colored walls and French-grey flooring … The screen is a full 120 feet long and 80 feet high … Joseph Dydzak II, a member of the company that owns the Boucherville Cine-Parc, also is interested in a string of other elsewhere in Canada.”
It should not be confused with the later Ciné-Parc Boucherville at 1700 Rue Effel, which closed in 2019.