Loew's State Theater | |
Marquee shows "A Christmas Story" production cancelled, which was due to snow, 16 December 2007.
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Address | 362 S. Salina Street Syracuse, New York United States |
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Owner | Syracuse Area Landmark Theatre |
Type | Movie palace |
Capacity | 2,908 |
Screens | 1 |
Current use | Performing arts center |
Opened | 18 February 1928 |
Website | |
Loew's State Theater
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Location | 362-374 S. Salina St., Syracuse, NY |
Coordinates | 43°2′50.67″N 76°9′9.36″W / 43.0474083°N 76.1526000°WCoordinates: 43°2′50.67″N 76°9′9.36″W / 43.0474083°N 76.1526000°W |
Architect | Thomas W. Lamb |
Architectural style | Classical Revival |
NRHP Reference # | 77000970 |
Added to NRHP | May 02, 1977 |
The Landmark Theatre, originally known as Loew's State Theater, is an historic theater from the era of "movie palaces", located on South Salina Street in Syracuse, New York, United States. Designed by Thomas W. Lamb, it is the city's only surviving example of the opulent theatrical venues of the 1920s. The Landmark is on the National Register of Historic Places.
The Loew's Corporation announced plans for a new theater on February 19, 1926. It would be built at the intersection of South Salina Street and West Jefferson Street, previously the location of the Jefferson Hotel. The Loew's State Theatre opened on February 18, 1928, and offered double bills of famous vaudeville stage acts and first-run films. During the Great Depression and World War II it continued to do good business, as theater patrons escaped for a few hours into its plush grandeur. However, by the 1970s, the theater suffered from low attendance and was in disrepair. It closed in 1975 and was in danger of demolition. In 1976, Syracuse Area Landmark Theatre, or SALT, was formed to preserve and renovate the venue. With the help of an October 11, 1977 benefit concert by Harry Chapin, the group successfully raised $65,000 to purchase the property, at which time Loew's State was renamed the Landmark Theatre. SALT gained ownership of the theater while the remainder of the building including the upper floors remained with then-owner Sutton Real Estate.
The Landmark eventually purchased the first two floors of the building and a $16 million renovation project lasting from October 2010 to November 2011 expanded the backstage area, also providing new dressing rooms and green rooms in a plan to try to attract larger, longer-running events to the theater. The aging, recessed loading dock in the theater's rear on South Clinton Street was removed and replaced with a new two-bay dock. The box office was relocated from Jefferson Street to Salina Street, next to the lobby entrance and the original wooden ticket booth, both disused since its Loews State days. Awnings over the street-level storefronts were removed.