This thread is coming a little late (the theatre is all but lost at this point) but considering the intense conversation is increasingly cluttering up the main development thread, I think it's reasonable to divert it to its own separate thread. Let's keep the topic here and keep it civil!
The latest from today:
Is it curtains for the Utah Theater? Judge denies move to block demolition
Quote:
A judge refused on Tuesday to temporarily block Salt Lake City from issuing demolition permits to developers wanting to tear down the historic Utah Theater on Main Street.
Third District Judge Robert Faust denied a motion by historic preservationists for a temporary restraining order against the city and its Redevelopment Agency, noting “glaring” legal problems with their approach, including suing city officials over the matter but not the property’s current owner.
Faust left open the option for Friends of the Utah Pantages Cinematic Theatre to revise and refile their request, which seeks to put demolition on hold while the group pursues a lawsuit to invalidate the city’s sale of the run-down property to developer Hines for construction of a luxury residential tower on the site.
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For the uninitiated, here's a quick summary:
In one corner, we have the SLC RDA and Hines. The SLC city government purchased the theatre more than a decade ago and had been trying to figure out what to do with it. They made a deal with the multi-billion dollar developer Hines with some (pretty weak) requirements. Hines decided that they would demolish the theatre and build a 31-story apartment tower featuring a midblock walkway and a privately-maintained, public pocket park on the roof of the parking garage. The deal was signed by the mayor's office in 2019 and the land was legally conveyed to Hines in 2021.
Wikipedia has more info.
In the other corner, the persistent and scrappy "Save the Utah Pantages Theatre" group which has been doing everything in their power to stop the deal and renovate the theatre (despite it being a done deal). They're very passionate that the deal can still be stopped, that the money for the restoration/rebuild is out there, and that SLC needs a grand movie theatre. Here's what the theatre currently looks like, post 1960s-era gutting:
The theatre is a bit of an oddball: it's set back from the street and is connected via a long corridor. The street frontage is nothing special, having been altered long ago much like the interior:
There's a lot more detail to this, but I think that's a good primer on the situation.