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Towers Cinema

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Type
  
Former cinema

Completed
  
1935

Opened
  
3 August 1935

Architectural style
  
Art Deco

Country
  
United Kingdom

Closed
  
6 October 1973

Town or city
  
Hornchurch

Architecture firm
  
Kemp & Tasker

Towers Cinema httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons88

Address
  
31 High Street, Hornchurch, Essex, RM11 1TP

Other designers
  
Interior design by Clark & Fenn

Architect
  
Leslie Hagger Kemp & Frederick Edward Tasker

Similar
  
Embassy Court, Saltdean Lido, Isokon building

Towers cinema hornchurch the history


Towers Cinema is a former cinema in Hornchurch, England. It was built in 1935 on part of the former Grey Towers estate and is noted for its Art Deco style of architecture. It was converted for use as a bingo hall in 1973. The Towers Cinema building has been threatened with demolition since 2015 and there is an ongoing local campaign to preserve the structure and to have it listed by Historic England.

Contents

History

The Towers Cinema was built on part of the former Grey Towers estate, a stately home which was demolished in 1931. During World War I, the estate had been requisitioned by the Army Council for use as a military hospital and army camp. Soldiers from Grey Towers set up a cinema on station lane, which later became the Queen's Theatre. A new Cinema, named The Towers after the old mansion house, was built on the southern boundary of the Grey Towers estate, at the west end of Hornchurch High Street.

The cinema was commissioned by David J. James, a brewing industrialist turned cinema impresario, for his D.J. James Cinema Circuit. It was designed by Leslie Hagger Kemp (1899–1997) and Frederick Edward Tasker, of the Kemp & Tasker partnership, which designed new and renovated existing cinemas for James' independent chain. Opening its doors on 3 August 1935, it provided facilities including an auditorium to seat 1799 patrons; a shallow stage with dressing rooms; a café-ballroom on the first floor that could seat 200; a cosmetics saloon for use by ladies; and an ample car park. The ornate interior of the cinema, including the auditorium, was designed by the firm Clark & Fenn. The opening programme was a double-bill screening of The Phantom Light starring Binnie Hale and Vagabond Lady starring Robert Young.

In March 1937 James sold his chain of cinemas for a considerable sum to Eastern Cinemas (GCF) Ltd which were then taken over by the Odeon chain in 1943. The characteristic neon ODEON signage was then applied covering the word Towers (which is cut into the fabric of the building but later restored in 2010).

The cinema closed on 6 October 1973, with a screening of the James Bond film Live and Let Die as the final show. The building was converted into a Top Rank bingo hall (later Mecca Bingo) later in 1973, and it remained in use as a bingo hall until the facility closed in 2015.

Although alterations to the foyer and lower auditorium have been made, many original features still remain. It is believed that the highly ornate coffered ceiling in the café-ballroom remains intact although now boarded to create lower ceilings and currently subdivided into offices. The private boxes haven't been used since the cinema was converted so have been preserved.

Leslie Hagger Kemp designed the former Union Cinema in Dunstable, Bedfordshire, built in 1936–37 which has achieved Grade II listed status; he was associated with the Regal in Camberwell built in 1938–39 also listed at Grade II. Apart from cinemas, Kemp and Tasker won the Daily Mail 'Ideal House' competition in 1934 (at the same time they were working on The Towers Building).

Campaign to save from demolition

The building was sold to the retail chain Lidl and was to be demolished to be replaced by a supermarket. Following a campaign to save the building, Havering London Borough Council temporarily protected it in 2015 so Historic England could assess its heritage value. Demolition has been opposed by the heritage charity, the Twentieth Century Society.

An approach was made by the Everyman Cinemas chain to purchase the building, but submitted their offer too late. In August 2016, Havering Council approved the scheme to demolish the Towers Cinema. Lidl have announced that they plan to retain the “Towers” concrete lettering and to create a public art installation at street level.

References

Towers Cinema Wikipedia