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The Great Britain Guide

Theatres · North West England

Hebden Bridge Picture House

Hebden Bridge Picture House in England North West, United Kingdom.

Benchmark on ^18 New Road (Hope Street face) - geograph.org.uk - 6537729

Roger Templeman — CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons licence

Plan your visit

Typical visit
2 h–3 h

About

Hebden Bridge Picture House is a cinema or movie theatre in England North West, United Kingdom. Britain's listed cinemas span Edwardian picture palaces, Art Deco super-cinemas of the 1930s, and the surviving independent neighbourhood houses.

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From the Wikipedia article

Hebden Bridge Picture House in Hebden Bridge, West Yorkshire, is one of the last remaining council-owned cinemas in Britain. Together with the adjacent shops, it forms a Grade II listed building. The Picture House, built between 1919-1921, is an independent cinema with daily evening screenings, weekend matinees and tea time screenings, and matinees most days during school holidays. There is a screening every Thursday morning, at which free tea and biscuits are provided. It also screens live broadcasts of theatre, opera, ballet, music and arts documentaries via satellite. It has both digital and 35mm projection facilities. It has one screen with over 500 seats, and mainly operates from the stalls (accessible) seating downstairs. It has a kiosk serving hot and cold drinks, cake, popcorn, sweets, chocolates and savoury snacks. The Picture House offers a wide-ranging programme of film and live events. It shows anywhere between 16 and 26 films per month, ranging from mainstream and blockbuster to art-house and foreign language films. There are regular screenings of specialist films and touring programmes from a range of organisations, including the British Film Institute. Certain screenings come with subtitles and / or audio description.

Excerpt from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0. See the source article linked in Sources below.

Background

History

Hebden Bridge's Picture House cinema first opened its doors in 1921 and is one of the last civic-owned cinemas in Britain. Originally boasting over 900 seats, its first screening was a double bill of Torn Sails and The Iron Stair. The venue became the main place of entertainment for the weavers, mill-workers, and other residents of Hebden Bridge and the upper Calder Valley and has been in continuous use as a cinema. In the late 1960s, when many of the mills had closed, the Picture House itself was near to closure. It was saved for the town by the actions of the then Hebden Royd Urban District Council (HRUDC) who purchased it from private ownership for about £6,000. The cinema passed into…

Sourced from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Coordinates
53.7405, -2.0126
Address
Holme Street, Hebden Bridge, HX7 8EE
Official site
hblt.co.uk

Sources

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Frequently asked questions

Where is Hebden Bridge Picture House?
Hebden Bridge Picture House is in North West England, in the United Kingdom — coordinates 53.7405°, -2.0126°.