750 W. 7th St. Los Angeles, CA 90017 | map |
Opened: July 19, 2019. The project had been set back several
times due to construction delays at The Bloc, a shopping complex bounded
by 7th St., Flower St., Hope St. and 8th. This photo of the theatre's entrance by Christina House appeared with Mark Olsen's 2019 L.A. Times story "
Will the Alamo Drafthouse L.A. be the last stand for movie theaters?"
Drafthouse was founded in 1997 in Austin by Tim
League. As the name implies, they serve food and drinks in their
theatres and have a reputation for quirky programming and a no text/no talk policy. The company has also dabbled in film distribution.
A residential tower has been proposed for the south end of
the Bloc that would result in demolition of the theatre spaces. See
several items about this at the bottom of the page.
Seating: 569 in 12 auditoria. They're motorized recliners with
tables attached. Seating capacities range from 40 to 63.
The lobby, with bar and video store, is on the 2nd floor with all the
auditoria up on 3 in the west side of the Bloc complex. Thanks to Scott Weinfeld for these seat counts:
#1 through #6 - 49 each, #7 - 40, #8 - 63, #9 - 49, #10 - 40, #11 - 42, #12 - 41.
Film equipment: Auditorium #8 is is
35mm equipped. They have two Simplex XLs.
3-D: Auditorium #6 is set up for the RealD process.
Website: drafthouse.com/los-angeles | www.facebook.com/DrafthouseLA
Architect: Richard Weiss, who has done lots of work for Alamo. See "Architect Breaks Down 120 Years of Movie Theatre Design," his 12 minute video on YouTube for Architectural Digest. Thanks to Chris Nichols for spotting it. But note that the Brooklyn Theatre Richard identifies as being in Los Angeles is actually some other theatre.
Wayne Ratkovich and his partners scored Alamo as a tenant for their Bloc
complex back in 2014. He had purchased the aging fortress-like Macy's
Plaza in 2012 and embarked on a $250 million renovation to take the roof
off the mall, open the complex up to the surrounding streets, and
reinvent the tenant mix. The Sheraton Hotel that's part of the project
also got an upgrade.
The complex closed due to
Covid restrictions in March 2020. Alamo filed for Chapter 11
bankruptcy protection in March 2021. In California the Texas-based chain
also has the
New Mission in San Francisco, a restored 1916 vintage
movie palace. They were seeking protection from creditors as they
reorganized, sold assets to an investor group, closed several theatres,
and said they would "continue to evaluate the health of all leases." Jill Goldsmith had a
March 3 story about the San Francisco situation for
Deadline. There were also stories from
Variety, the
L.A. Times and the
San Francisco Chronicle.
"The Bloc: Reinvention. Discovery. Human Connection." They show Alamo up on 2. It's actually 2 and 3. The big blue mass with no label had been the Macy's location until its closure in March 2025.
Status: Alive and doing well with the unique Alamo mix of mainstream Hollywood product, revivals and cult favorites.
The chain was sold to Sony in June 2024. Thanks to Gary Meyer for spotting "
Sony buys dine-in movie movie chain Alamo Drafthouse," a June 12 L.A. Times story by Christi Carras and Ryan Faughnder.
It's now part of the new "Sony Pictures Experiences Division" headed by Michael Kustermann, who was the Alamo CEO prior to the sale. Among the article's comments:
"... Sony did not disclose the price of the deal but promised to 'preserve Alamo Drafthouse's distinctive movie-dining experience.' The exhibitor — which boasts 35 locations in major U.S. cities including Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Boston, Austin and New York — is known for serving food and craft beer at its theaters... 'Alamo Drafthouse's differentiated movie-going experience, admired brand and devoted community fit well with this vision,' said Ravi Ahuja, president and COO of Sony Pictures Entertainment, in a statement. 'We look forward to building upon the innovations that have made Alamo Drafthouse successful and will, of course, continue to welcome content from all studios and distributors.'
"Alamo Drafthouse says it is the seventh-largest theater chain in North America. In a limited sense, Sony’s acquisition of Alamo is a flashback to Hollywood’s Golden Age, when the major studios also owned and operated their own theater chains, thereby controlling production, distribution and exhibition.... Sony is the only top studio without a mass-market streamer to compete with Netflix... Restrictions on studios owning theaters thawed in the decades after the [1940s Federal consent] decrees as studios started to dip their toes in the exhibition space. Sony for a time owned the Loews theater chain, which is now part of AMC...
"Under Sony, Alamo Drafthouse will keep all of its existing locations, including its only theater in Southern California, which opened in downtown Los Angeles in 2019. The studio acquired the exhibitor from private equity firms Altamont Capital Partners, Fortress Investment Group and founder Tim League, who launched Alamo Drafthouse with a single-screen Austin repertory theater with his wife, Karrie, in 1997. Like many theater operators, Alamo Drafthouse struggled in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, which shuttered cinemas for months. The company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in 2021, citing pandemic-related woes. It emerged from bankruptcy under the ownership of a group of senior creditors, which included Altamont and Fortress... "
A November 2024 story in
My San Antonio noted that Matt Vonderahe, the chain's chief financial officer, was leaving and others in the organization were moving up to fill the position.
Adding L.A. locations? In 2024 the
circuit was looking for two additional Los Angeles area
locations, according to Tony Vinciquerra, Chairman and CEO of Sony
Pictures Entertainment. Sony has owned the chain since mid-2024. It was noted that the Westside and the Southbay were both possibilities. Vinciquerra noted that 25% of domestic boxoffice
basically comes from four markets: New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and
the Bay Area. Alamo's expansion plans would be geared toward having a
greater presence in at least three of those markets. He said they're
unsure about Chicago. The comments came during a December 5, 2024
conversation about the business with Elizabeth M. Daley at USC's Ray
Stark Theatre. She's the dean of the USC School of Cinematic Arts. At the time the circuit was operating 44 locations,
mostly in Texas and the midwest. As of early 2026 there had been nothing new announced for the L.A. market.
Bay Area: In December 2024 the
company announced a Bay Area expansion involving new locations
at Mountain View's Village at San Antonio Center and at the Westfield
Valley Fair mall in Santa Clara. See "
Alamo Drafthouse to Open Two New Cinemas in San Francisco," Rebecca Rubin's December 3, 2024 story for Variety. Both locations, previously operated by
Showplace Icon, got a full renovation and ended up with ten screens
each. The 64,500 s.f. space in Mountain View has 1,100 seats. The 62,228 s.f space in Santa Clara also has 1,100
seats. They both opened in June 2025. Alamo's only other West Coast Location is the five-screen
New Mission in San Francisco, opened in 2015.
In 2025 Alamo implemented a mobile ordering system and in February 2026 rolled out a revised version that could be used during the feature. Variety had a January 9 story "
Alamo Goes Mobile..."
As of 2026 Bobby Brayboy is the general manager of Alamo's L.A. complex.
Interior views:
Looking into the lobby from the main entrance. Photo: Christina House -
L.A. Times - 2019
A view in from the rollup door on the east side. Photo: Bill Counter - 2019
The bar area. Photo: Bill Counter - 2019
A look back out through the rollup. Photo: Bill Counter - 2019
Looking south along the boxoffice counter with the escalators up to the theatres just this side of the entrance doors. Photo: Bill Counter - 2019
All the theatres are up on the 3rd floor. Photo: Bill Counter - 2019
The 3rd floor landing. Photo: Bill Counter - 2019
A display area on 3. Photo: Bill Counter - 2019
Around the corner. Photo: Bill Counter - 2024
The corridor to the auditoria. Photo: Bill Counter - 2019
A peek into the restroom area. Photo: Bill Counter - 2019
Another corridor view. Photo: Christina House -
L.A. Times - 2019
Auditorium #2. Photo: Christina House -
L.A. Times - 2019
Auditorium #4. Capacity 49, screen width 23'. Photo: Bill Counter - 2019
The rear of auditorium #4. Photo: Bill Counter - 2019
Auditorium #8. This one is equipped for 35mm. It's a 24' screen. Photo: Bill Counter - 2019
The rear of auditorium #8. It's the big house: 63 seats. Photo: Bill Counter - 2019
A peek up at the booth in #8. Simplex XLs flanking the digital unit. Photo: Bill Counter - 2019
Auditorium #12, capacity 41. The projector is in a box on the back wall. Photo: Bill Counter - 2019
Heading back down to the lobby. Photo: Bill Counter - 2019
A few construction views:
A courtyard photo appearing on the Alamo website with the August 16, 2018 story by Megan Reardon "
LA...we finally have a construction update for you."
New
escalators in the 2nd floor lobby heading up to the 3rd floor where the
theatres will be. It's a photo from the Alamo website's August 2018
story.
3rd floor auditorium spaces in August 2018 as the build out was beginning. Thanks to Alamo for the photo from their website.
A look across. Photo: Bill Counter - February 2019
Framing for the lobby. Photo: Bill Counter - February 2019
Looking through the 2nd floor lobby area. Photo: Bill Counter - February 2019
Progress in the lobby. Photo: Bill Counter - March 2019
A look across to the 2nd and 3rd floors. Photo: Bill Counter - March 2019
The entrance with glass installed. On the left are the escalators down to Flower St. Photo: Bill Counter - May 2019
A look toward the entrance doors. On the right it's a rollup door into the bar area. Photo: Bill Counter - May 2019
A peek through the rollup. Photo: Bill Counter - May 2019
The bar. Photo: Bill Counter - May 2019
Signage is up. Photo: Bill Counter - June 2019
The view of the art from a level below. Photo: Bill Counter - June 2019
Renderings of the project:
This rendering of the new look for the Bloc was from the Ratkovich Company in 2014.
A rendering from Studio One Eleven of the street level entrance on Flower that appeared with "
Alamo Drafthouse to open in 2018," Nicholas Slayton's June 2017 story for L.A. Downtown News. Note the escalators on the right heading up to the lobby.
A courtyard rendering from Studio One Eleven that appeared with the 2017 DTLA News story.
Thanks to Brandon R. Guzman-Johnson for sharing this item as well as the two below in a January 2025 post on the
DTLA Development Facebook group.
The project description.
A rendering of the proposed tower.
In other news: Macy's is set to close their store at The Bloc in March 2025. Broker Justin Weiss noted in a comment to a Facebook post that negotiations are underway with new tenants to fill the space.
| back to top | Downtown: theatre district overview | Hill St. and farther west | Broadway theatres | Spring St. theatres | Main St. and farther east | downtown theatres by address | downtown theatres alphabetical list |
| Westside | Hollywood | Westwood and Brentwood | Along the Coast | [more] Los Angeles movie palaces | the main alphabetical list | theatre history resources | film and theatre tech resources | theatres in movies | LA Theatres on facebook | contact info | welcome and site navigation guide |
No comments:
Post a Comment