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OpenedMay 1999; 17 years ago and designed by ArchitectBryan Avery. the BFI IMAX is an IMAX cinema in the South Bank district of London, just north of Waterloo Station.
It is owned by the British Film Institute and since July 2012 has been operated by Odeon Cinemas.
The cinema is located in the centre of a roundabout junction with Waterloo Road to the south-east, Stamford Street to the north-east, York Road to the south-west and Waterloo Bridge to the north-west.
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Completed in May 1999, the screen is the largest in Britain (20m high and 26m wide). It has a seating capacity of just under 500 and a 12,000 Watt digital surround sound system.
Although the site is surrounded by traffic and has an underground line just four metres below, the architects and engineers accounted for this in their design and the entire upper structure sits on anti vibration bearings to prevent noise propagation.
The cinema won several awards at the time of opening, including a Design Council Millennium Product Award in 1999 and a Civic Trust Award in 2000.
In 2009, the screen was replaced and a digital IMAX projector was installed alongside the existing 70mm projector. In July 2012, the BFI announced that Odeon Cinemas had been selected to operate it for the next five years, with the option of termination after three years.
Odeon will maintain the film programmes, and booking of tickets online and per telephone. This also gives customers the opportunity to watch Operas on the giant screen. The BFI will retain a great deal of power over the cinema's operation however, including parts of the film schedule and the technical operation. The name will remain the same.
To start this move to mainstream cinema, the BFI London IMAX theatre celebrated by having sold 66,000 pre-booked tickets for The Dark Knight Rises in just 5 weeks, giving a total sale in tickets of 21 even before the premiere of the movie
Audience members are see as they watch the world premiere of the IMAX film "A Beautiful Planet" at AMC Lowes Lincoln Square theater on Saturday, April 16, 2016 in New York City. The film features footage of Earth captured by astronauts aboard the International Space Station. Photo Credit: (NASA/Joel Kowsky)
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I was at the IMAX just as the sun was going down, i've toyed with different versions of this but finally stopped on this one.
Pressure /
Presents iMax Phone
Consists of 5 Different Colors
6 Changeable Lock Screens
Available At Cake Day 8/13/2020: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/CAKEDAY/196/131/3673
On a trip to London this week...There was this 360 degree cinema in the middle of a roundabout...The reflections are all objects INSIDE..!!
Another one from the Lumiere London Light Festival. The cinema kept changing into different colours and it was a nice backdrop against the busses whizzing past.
Last November.
Nikon F4. AF Nikkor 24mm F2.8D lens. Mr. Negative Silver Screen Negative 35mm ECN2 film.
© All rights reserved 2011. Please do not use my images without my explicit permission.
Best viewed on BLACK. I reccomend seeing this large, it looks much more interesting here!
Went up to London and got a few shots, here is one of the best from the afternoon/evening out!
I've never been to the Imax before, its a pretty interesting building. Good light trail location too!
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Downtown Sacramento, Ca
The last movie I watched was Despicable Me 2 in 3D. What fun! Cartoon movies are fantastically colorful and 3D comes through. See one if you haven't already. :- )
...with a bang!
This is my entry for the #71 - Fire, Flame or Heat category in the 113 in 2013 Group.
lamp posts, sign posts, traffic light posts, could we please have some more posts. there's just not enough of them on the streets of london.
Seen at Ashton Bus Station working a 219 service to Manchester Piccadilly. A Alexander Dennis Enviro 400.
BFI IMAX was designed by Bryan Avery of Avery Associates Architects[2] and completed in May 1999. The screen is the largest in Britain (20m high and 26m wide). It has a seating capacity of just under 500 and a 12,000 Watt digital surround sound system. Although the site is surrounded by traffic and has an underground line just four metres below, the architects and engineers accounted for this in their design and the entire upper structure sits on anti vibration bearings to prevent noise propagation.[3]
The cinema won several awards at the time of opening, including a Design Council Millennium Product Award[4] in 1999 and a Civic Trust Award in 2000.[5]
In 2012, the screen was replaced and a digital IMAX projector was installed alongside the existing 70mm projector. In July 2012, the BFI announced that Odeon Cinemas had been selected to operate it for the next five years, with the option of termination after three years. Odeon will maintain the film programmes, and booking of tickets online and per telephone. This also gives customers the opportunity to watch Operas on the giant screen. The BFI will retain a great deal of power over the cinema's operation however, including parts of the film schedule and the technical operation.[6] The name will remain the same.
To start this move to mainstream cinema, the BFI London IMAX theatre celebrated by having sold 66,000 pre-booked tickets for The Dark Knight Rises in just 5 weeks, giving a total sale in tickets of £1,000,000 even before the premiere of the movie.