Hello, KJP and everyone. If this doesn't look like potential, I don't know what does.
Here's a link: http://www.freetimes.com/story/4256
Landmark Choice
Beck Center Has Chosen a City. Now the Next Debate Can Begin.
By Michael Gill
Bob Dobush lives at the theater, and not in any metaphorical sense. The collector and restorer of antique radios keeps an apartment above the long-vacant Hilliard Square theater in Lakewood. He bought the landmark in 1998 to save it from the wrecking ball.
Behind the theater's Hilliard Avenue door stands the decaying glory of a bygone era, an ornate lobby and staircase. To the right you can see light at the end of a tunnel — a retail arcade that stretches through the building, all the way to Madison Avenue. These days the spaces are stacked with boxes of old radios and spare parts. Broken cakes of fallen plaster dot the carpet. Inside the auditorium the eyes can't help but be drawn up into the expanse — past the frescoes, past a balcony to a vaulted ceiling, and an endless gallery of architectural details. Depending on your age, you might remember time- warping while the Rocky Horror Picture Show played on the screen, or maybe porno, or art flicks, or, if you can remember more than three decades ago, mainstream movies.
These days, like the nearby Variety theater on Lorain, or the LaSalle on East 185th, and so many others in and around Cleveland, the Hilliard sits empty in magnificent decay, defying entrepreneurs and dreamers to figure out a way to use it. Right after Dobush bought the Hilliard, he turned down a purchase offer from one of the drugstore chains — the new owner would have razed the building. Dobush wants to find a buyer who will see it for the architectural landmark it is, and preserve it. Now opportunity is near the door, but whether it knocks will depend on a few local decision makers getting together with the same vision.
First among them are the trustees at Beck Center for the Arts. Their announcement last week that the organization —courted by Crocker Park developer Bob Stark — will stay and build new facilities somewhere in Lakewood came as great news for the city. It's also probably one of the best chances Northeast Ohio will ever have to rescue an old theater and return it to active use — not just to patch it up and open the doors, but to restore it, fill it with creative activity, and make it the neighborhood anchor that it once was.