Hyde Park Picture House – Welcome Back!

After years of redevelopment, one of the UK’s oldest cinemas, Leeds’ Hyde Park Picture House, is about to open to the public again this week.

First opened in 1914, merely moments before the outbreak of the First World War, the art-house started off by presenting heartfelt patriotic dramas and news reports, aiming to uplift spirits and raise the public morale during the uprising international conflicts.

Nowadays, it screens critically acclaimed films from all over the globe and the team commits to deliver inspiring projects for Leeds’ communities.

In 2014, after just having celebrated Hyde Park Picture House’s 100th anniversary, the team devised plans to revitalise the Grade II listed building. With financial help of partners, the Leeds City Council and The National Lottery Heritage Fund, the cinema’s interior and exterior charm has been rekindled on every level (quite literally). With a little delay, also due to the pandemic, the 109-year-old community cinema will reopen its gates to audiences on Friday, 30th June.

The redevelopment project featured major efforts to make the Picture House more accessible for all audiences. For more than three years, this meant taking steps on a big scale to remove barriers that previously impeded an easy access to the cinema’s arts. The steps in front of the main entrance of the Victorian building were replaced by a ramp in order to secure a step-free access, meaning that wheelchair users no longer have to look out for a separate means of entry.

Additionally, the revived picture house now offers an accessible toilet on the ground floor that also houses infant changing facilities. A new internal platform lift also ensures wheelchair access to all the other floors, so that all audiences are able to enjoy all parts of the cinema, for instance the second screen room in the basement.

In an effort to make the foyer more spacious, the initial wall separating the entrance area from the main screening room on the ground floor was moved back a few meters. This increased the size of the foyer and meant the size of the auditorium was reduced with the ensuing removal of some seats. Also, this meant that part of the original building had to be torn apart.

One of the most important factors in this part of the renovation was preserving the original character and cosiness, as well as heritage features. One example is the historic mantelpiece above the counter space and the gas lamps, which required new gas pipes to be installed in order to pass modern security checks.

Other original characteristics in the entrance area that were revived in this renovation process are the hand-painted and stained glass window as well as the fire hydrant. Features like these maintain that spark of nostalgia for Hyde Park Picture House’s audiences.

Revitalising the entrance area also included sanding and polishing the terrazzo floor which, surprisingly, resulted in the team discovering more of the original terrazzo floor that had been hidden beneath carpet and linoleum since some time around the 1950s.

The renovated foyer now simply offers more space for the counter area that also serves as a kiosk and bar, making a larger range of refreshments and snacks available and accommodating an accessible lower counter to the left hand side, right next to the entrance of the main auditorium. The mixture of modernity and Victorian architectural features now leaves the foyer with a timeless touch.

A three-story extension to the building now offers more space for spending time in the building. Before the renovations started, people in the queue generally had to stand outside (sometimes in the rain). Now, the ground floor also offers a small seating area for the Picture House’s audience to enjoy refreshments and snacks before the film starts. Designers were hired to work out the best external look for the extension, so that its modernity does not take away from the old building’s charm.

The new part of the Picture House also features bricks arranged to look like 35mm film to honour and highlight the cinema’s history and its rightful place amongst the iconic venues in Leeds.

Address
73 Brudenell Road, Leeds, LS6 1JD

Phone
0113 275 2045

Email
[email protected]

Website
hpph.co.uk

Photography by Mark Wheelwright.

Further reading BY

Do you have a story to tell?
We want to hear your stories and help you share them.