Plans to revamp and reopen the Cinerama movie theater in Seattle’s Belltown neighborhood might get a boost Tuesday when the Seattle City Council votes on a $1 million grant to help with the restoration.
The iconic theater has been closed for more than three years. Cinerama owners abruptly shut the theater and laid off employees in February 2020. The ensuing Covid-19 pandemic threatened to keep the theater doors closed indefinitely.
But hope for the theater's revival took a positive turn in May, when the Seattle International Film Festival announced that it had purchased Cinerama from former Microsoft co-founder Paul G. Allen and planned to renovate and reopen it later this year under a new name.
The $1 million grant from the city will help to revitalize the downtown core, create jobs, and foster the arts, said Councilmember Andrew Lewis, who sponsored the legislation.
“I’m grateful to my colleagues for their support in advancing this critical investment to re-open the Cinerama and activate our Downtown,” Lewis said in a statement. “The public benefits unlocked by this proposal will further strengthen our reputation as a center of film culture.”