6081 Center Dr. Los Angeles, CA 90045 | map |
Opened: July 13, 2001 as an 18 screen complex in the Howard Hughes Center called The Bridge Cinema de lux. It's in the Westchester area of Los Angeles, just east of Sepulveda. The north side of the center is along the 405. Thanks to Scott Neff for sharing this c.2001 image on the Cinema Tour page about the theatre.
The Edwards circuit had begun the multiplex but were engulfed by bankruptcy problems during construction and didn't finish it. Chris Utley notes: "The Howard Hughes Promenade opened up with this big massive shell of an empty theatre in the early part of Summer 2001." National Amusements took it over and finished it. The center had once been called the Promenade at Howard Hughes Center. It's now branded as HHLA.
Website: cinemark.com/theatres/ca-los-angeles/cinemark-howard-hughes
A July 13, 2001 opening day ad. Thanks to Mike Rivest for locating these. Visit his site: Movie-Theatre.org
Seating: Initially it was 4,200 in the 18 auditoria. As of 2020 it was down to 3,418. After closing off the upper six screens in 2024 it was a total of 1,813 seats in the 12 still in use. Thanks to Scott Weinfeld for these counts:
#1 -130, #2 - 138, #3 - 139, #4 - 139, #5 - 129, #6 - 146, #7 - 136, #8 - 140, #9 - 154, #10 - 190 + 22 dBox - 70mm equipped, #11 - 78 + 30 DBox, #12 - 242 XD.
Prior to their closure, the capacities of the other 6 were:
#13 - 261 + 30 DBox, #14 - 297, #15 - 292, #16 - 295, #17 - 212, #18 - 210.
Imax / XD: Screen #12, once an Imax film venue, is now branded as a "Cinemark XD" house. By March 2014 the 70mm Imax projector was gone and in April that house became an XD venue with Barco Aura 11.1 sound. It has 242 seats.
Film capability: Screen #10 currently has 5 perf 70mm capability. See the Cinemark page "What is 70mm Film?" Thanks to Paul Rayton for spotting it. They will be running Christopher Nolan's "The Odyssey" in 5 perf 70 beginning August 16. See Michael Coate's In70mm.com article "'The Odyssey': The 70mm Presentations." #10 has a capacity of 212.
Architects: unknown
In a 2009 comment Chris Utley described the complex as it then was:
"Level 2 is their lobby and main entrance which leads guests to escalators taking them to level 1 or 3. Their credit card kiosks as well as Guest Services are in the lobby as well. Level 3 features their in-theatre restaurant '12 Lounge' (named because Edwards had originally slated that space to Auditorium 12, but NA had other plans) featuring lots of booze, burgers, chicken tenders and pizza (really good pizza!).
In early 2010 it became the Rave 18 + Imax under management of the Texas-basded Rave Motion Pictures circuit. See the December 22, 2009 article that Chris Utley located: "Sumner Redstone’s National Amusements closes deal to sell 29 theaters to Rave Cinemas." The L.A. location wasn't part of the deal but the Times noted that it would be part of a separate transaction involving six more theatres that would be finalized in several weeks. After these deals Rave would have 65 locations in 20 states with about 1,000 screens. At the time, they were the fifth largest circuit in the country.
In November 2012 it was announced that Cinemark would be taking over 31 Rave locations. As of May 2013 it was a Cinemark operation. It's now called the Cinemark Howard Hughes Los Angeles + XD.
Interior views:
The back of auditorium 12. Photo: Kenneth S. on Yelp - 2024
Art comes to the upper level: The top floor, once with screens 13 through 18, will open in late 2026 as a Meow Wolf art exhibit. Their website: meowwolf.com/visit/los-angeles
Their quest for an L.A. location was covered in "Meow Wolf supercharged the way we experience art. Is L.A. ready for the wild ride?," a May 3, 2024 L.A. Times story by Todd Martens. Jack Dunn revealed the location they had picked in "Meow Wolf Unveils Location of Permanent Los Angeles Exhibition," his May 13, 2024 story for Variety. The Times also had a May 13 story with the news.
More details emerged in "First look: Inside Meow Wolf L.A., a psychedelic wonderland that celebrates the movies," Todd Martens' January 7, 2026 Times story. He noted:
More exterior views:
More information: See the Cinema Treasures page on the Cinemark Howard Hughes. They also have a page on the Fantasia 2000 Imax. Thanks to the Cinema Tour page about the theatre for the dates for the various operators. Cinema Tour also has a page about the temporary 2000 Imax venue. There's a page about the theatre on Yelp.







































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