Venetian Theatre

The Venetian Theatre is a movie theater, performing arts venue, and restaurant in downtown Hillsboro, Oregon, United States. Formerly the Town Theater, the building re-opened in 2008 after more than a decade of inactivity and revitalization plans. Built in 1888 as a bank, later mayor Orange Phelps converted the property into a theater in 1911 and in 1925 converted it into a two-story Italianate building with a larger auditorium. Prior to renovation the theater was owned by the city of Hillsboro who purchased it from Act III Theatres.

Venetian Theatre
The theater in 2015
General information
StatusTemporarily closed since 2017
Architectural styleItalianate
Town or cityHillsboro, Oregon
CountryUnited States
Coordinates45°31′22″N 122°59′14″W
Construction started1925
Completed1925
Renovated2007–2008
Renovating team
ArchitectRalph Hill
Renovating firmPartin and Hill Architects

The theater has been temporarily closed since April 2017 in connection with a planned change of ownership. However, that sale fell through, and the theater and restaurant remain closed in mid-2020. In August 2017, its owner told the Hillsboro Tribune that he had found a new buyer, but with no information on when the Venetian might reopen. In May 2020, the identity of a new buyer was revealed, shortly after the purchased was completed. The new owner indicated plans to reopen the building with a new restaurant but to convert the theater space into a ballroom, with the restaurant possibly opening during 2020.[1]

History

In 1888, banker John W. Shute built a two-story building on East Main Street as the new home for the First National Bank of Hillsboro. The structure featured a façade in the Italianate style of architecture, external cast iron ornamentation, and a roof line with a bracketed cornice. In 1911, the bank moved across Main Street and later mayor Orange Phelps purchased the building.[2] Although Phelps did not have the money to buy the building, the bank loaned him the funds and he opened The Grand Theater, a 200-seat theater.[3] The 19 feet (5.8 m) wide by 120 feet (37 m) long theater was expanded in 1915 to 500 seats and named the Liberty Theater.[3][4]

In 1925, a fire destroyed the theater and Phelps rebuilt the structure and named the new theater The Venetian.[5] The first motion picture with sound shown in Hillsboro was The Broadway Melody in 1929 at the theater.[3] Beginning in 1935 Phelps held an annual free show for children at Christmas which continued into the 1990s.[3][6] In 1956, a fire gutted the building, with Phelps rebuilding and opening the following year as the 800-plus seat Town Theater.[3] After the fire Phelps had held double features at his Town Theater.[7] In 1961, the theater hosted the premiere of the film Ring of Fire, which had been filmed in Vernonia, Oregon.[3] Phelps owned the theater along with several other theaters in Washington County into the 1970s.[3] Tom Moyer Theaters purchased Phelps’ theaters in 1978 and in turn sold all of that theater chain's screens to Act III Theatres in 1989.[5][8] In 1996, Act III closed the theater and sold the building to the city for $1,500.[8]

After purchasing the property the city proposed several redevelopment ideas for the building, including selling it to the McMenamins brewpub chain for a theater and pub.[4][9] In 2001, Hillsboro purchased the adjoining 5,000-square-foot (460 m2) building (home to Music Village at the time) for $160,000 to add to the property to be used for any redevelopment of the theater.[10] The city solicited ideas for the redevelopment of the building in early 2007.[11][12] While under city ownership the space was briefly used as storage for the Hillsboro Farmers’ Market and faced possible demolition as estimates for the cost to renovate the structure continually increased.[13]

The Venetian's main neon sign at night

In August 2007, the city sold the building to developer Denzil Scheller for $10 and gave him $750,000 to assist in the renovation of the deteriorating building.[14][15] Scheller spent $2.5 million to renovate the space and bring the building up to modern fire, earthquake, and disability access codes.[16] Of this $2.5 million, around $1.5 million came from his own funds, and the remainder came from city funds along with $250,000 from Metro in the conversion of the space into a theater, meeting space, restaurant, and live event venue.[16] Work included gutting the building to rebuild the support structure, removing asbestos, and opening a wall into the adjacent Music Village building.[17] Local architectural firm Partin and Hill Architects designed the renovations.[18]

Scheller renamed the theater as The Venetian, returning to the former name, with the distinct yellow marquee of the Town Theater removed in September 2007.[19] The re-opening of the theater is part of the city's plan to create a regional arts center in the downtown core and attract more people after 5:00 p.m. when county and city offices close.[11][14][20] On July 9, 2008, the new The Venetian Theatre and Bistro opened with the theater portion opening on July 11.[21] In September 2008, Bag & Baggage Productions became the resident theater company at the theater and opened their new season with Steel Magnolias.[22] In October 2010, the renovation of the theater was awarded the Outstanding Achievement in Design award from the Oregon Main Street organization.

In early 2017, owner Denzil Scheller reported that he had reached a tentative agreement to sell the theater to a buyer who, for now, wished to remain anonymous. The theater would close at the end of the day on April 13, temporarily, while the sale was finalized, to reopen at an unknown date.[23] The theater remained closed as of August 2017, and the Hillsboro Tribune reported that the planned sale earlier in the year had fallen through, with owner Scheller saying the buyer had "disappeared" without explanation just before completing the purchase.[24] In August 2017, Scheller told the Tribune that he had found a new buyer, but without revealing any additional details.[24]

In April 2020, the still-vacant building was purchased by John Lee, who told the News-Times in May that he plans to reopen it with a new, upscale restaurant and to remake the theater space into a ballroom.[1]

Details

The theater at night (after closing time)

Located in downtown Hillsboro on Main Street between Second and Third avenues, the theater is one block north of the Hillsboro Central MAX light rail station.[16] Although closed since 2017, the 16,000-square-foot (1,500 m2) space includes a 370-seat theater, and a restaurant with an upstairs balcony.[16] The balcony sits above Main Street and has roll-up windows.[17] On the exterior are decorative terra cotta urns and red colored roof tiles on Main Street.[2] Designed to encourage late night patronage of the downtown area, the theater is a centerpiece of revitalization efforts of that part of Hillsboro.[20]

The current building is a multi-use facility that includes a theater and restaurant.[16] Prior to closing in 2017, the theater exhibited movies, presented live performances, was a live music venue.[16][17] The new owner who purchased the building in 2020 indicated plans to reopen the venue with a new upscale restaurant but to flatten the floor of the theater space and convert it into a ballroom.[1]

gollark: Easier than somehow interfacing with everyone's brain.
gollark: Programming languages are optimised for computers, and if it can build and maintain nuclear reactors I'm sure it can do that too.
gollark: Yes, but they operate at something like 10Hz and you couldn't just temporarily retask them without breaking things horribly.
gollark: Offloading computing to humans sounds tricky and inefficient.
gollark: What is the APL command for "build nuclear reactor"?

References

  1. Urenda, Gabby (May 14, 2020) [online date May 13]. "Old venue finds new life: The Venetian in downtown Hillsboro has a new owner; plans for venue". News-Times/Washington County Times. p. B1. Archived from the original on August 13, 2020. Retrieved 2020-08-13.
  2. "Town Theater", Hillsboro Historical Society Retrieved on August 14, 2008.
  3. Doctor, Jerri. “Phelps personifies pioneer spirit”. The Hillsboro Argus, October 19, 1976, Historic Potpourri, p. 12.
  4. Anderson, David R. “Cost to renovate Town Theater soars”. The Oregonian, May 9, 2002, West Zoner, p. 1.
  5. History. Archived 2011-07-14 at the Wayback Machine Venetian Theatre & Bistro. Retrieved on August 15, 2008.
  6. “Hillsboro chamber plans series of holiday events”. The Oregonian, November 22, 1990, West Zoner, p. 6.
  7. "Town's Remaining Theatre Will Do Double Duty". Boxoffice. 70 (3): 42. November 10, 1956.
  8. Colby, Richard N. “Hillsboro buys Town Theater for a pittance: $1,500”. The Oregonian, December 19, 1996, West Zoner, p. C4.
  9. Anderson, David R. “Hillsboro sees downtown storefront as enhancement to theater’s rebirth”. The Oregonian, June 8, 2001, West Zoner, p. C3.
  10. “Council purchases property for an entertainment venue”. The Oregonian, September 20, 2001, Portland Zoner, p. D3.
  11. Booone, Jerry F. “Town Theater finds friends”. The Oregonian, March 20, 2007, Local News, p. B3.
  12. Booone, Jerry F. “Old theater may yet get a second act”. The Oregonian, February 5, 2007, Local News, p. B1.
  13. Bermudez, Esmeralda. “Theater's future languishes in the wings”. The Oregonian, August 25, 2005, West Zoner Hillsboro, p. 1.
  14. Rostami, Marjon. “Town Theater renovation promises to enliven downtown”. The Oregonian, August 2, 2007, Metro West Neighbors, p. 7
  15. Rostami, Marjon. “Developer sets stage for revival of theater”. The Oregonian, August 9, 2007, Metro West Neighbors, p. 05.
  16. Suh, Elizabeth. “Venetian promises new gathering spot on site of old Town Theater”. The Oregonian, May 15, 2008, Metro West Neighbors, p. 14.
  17. Boone, Jerry F. “Downtown, anticipation is building”. The Oregonian, December 13, 2007, Metro West Neighbors, p. 4.
  18. Gordanier, Susan (October 2, 2009). "Ralph Hill, local architect, retires". The Hillsboro Argus. Retrieved 2009-10-06.
  19. Gordanier, Susan. “Venetian tide sweeps away The Town”. The Hillsboro Argus, September 11, 2007.
  20. Boone, Jerry F. “Paint a pretty picture for downtown Hillsboro”. The Oregonian, October 18, 2007, Metro West Neighbors, p. 4.
  21. Gordanier, Susan. “Venetian Theatre opens (at last)”. The Hillsboro Argus, July 11, 2008.
  22. "Arts & Entertainment: Five Live - Performance". The Oregonian. The Oregonian. September 5, 2008. p. 50.
  23. Pursinger, Geoff (April 5, 2017). "Downtown Hillsboro's Venetian Theatre to close April 13". Hillsboro Tribune. Retrieved 2017-07-03.
  24. Pursinger, Geoff (August 25, 2017). "Venetian Theatre sale falls through". Hillsboro Tribune. p. A7. Retrieved 2017-08-28.
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