Vintage 1970s Photos Show Lost Sites of NYC's Lower East Side
A quest to find his grandmother's birthplace led Richard Marc Sakols on a mission to capture his changing neighborhood on film.
Untapped Cities contributor Matt Lambros of After the Final Curtain has a new article on his website about the abandoned Loew’s Canal Theater at 31 Canal Street, closed since the 1950s. It has a fascinating history and gorgeous interior, designed by the famous theater architect Thomas Lamb who did many of the forgotten theaters of upper Broadway and the Empire theater on 42nd Street (now the AMC Empire).
The Loew’s Canal Theater was built in 1927 and was the second largest theater in New York City. It was sold a year later to a company that went bankrupt and bought back in 1929. In 1932 it was bombed, along with the Loew’s 46th Street Theatre. Closed in the 1950s, it was converted into retail space on the ground floor and a warehouse in the theater space, but the last retail tenant vacated in the 2000s.
The facade was designated a NYC landmark in 2010 but plans to revitalize the space or to convert it into condos have all fallen through. For now, the warehouse space is still active as the theater continues to dilapidate. Scroll down for photos, and see more information on After the Final Curtain.
See more photographs of abandoned theaters from Matt Lambros’ column on Untapped Cities and also explore inside the abandoned Harlem Renaissance Theater and Casino.
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