View allAll Photos Tagged Civic
Taken through a photographic crystal ball.
Please follow me and leave a comment if you like my work. I would love to follow you back, but please no group advertisements.
Please also fave photos on pages 13/14/15.
www.flickr.com/photos/mamfphotography/page9
Comments also advertising a group will be deleted. Please let us talk photography.
Information from Cinema Treasures website ( go there to see a picture of this beauty while it was still open cinematreasures.org/theaters/2650 )
Opened in 1941, the Civic Detroit Theater was an Art Moderne style first-run house, which could seat around 1,455, all on a single floor. It was also known at various times as the Detroit Civic Theatre.
In 1980, it was acquired by Eric and Ervin Steiner, who triplexed the auditorium in 1981.
It closed in 1984, and was subsequently used as a furniture warehouse, though it retains some of its original decoration.
An evening walk round an almost deserted town due to the World Cup on TV with England v Tunisia, was very pleasant. Southend Civic Centre on a sunny evening.
Morning Tai Chi in Burnaby's Civic Square
Garden and lawn in Burnaby's Civic Square and library
Metrotown, Burnaby, British Columbia
My friend sent me a link saying this theater opened in 1941 and ultimately closed in 1984. It had been used as warehouse space until it closed for good.
Grainfield Opera House, corner of 3rd and Main Streets, Grainfield, Kansas. This 1887 building was constructed by the Grainfield Town Company, a partnership that had taken ownership of the town area from the railroad. It is notable for its Mesker Brothers cast-iron storefront. The building served as a civic auditorium and community center for Grainfield; it also held several stores, including a harness store, a grocery store, and an auto repair shop. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.