The Terrace Theatre in Robbinsdale has been an empty shell for more than a decade. The reason? Simple economics.
Even if it were remodeled inside and its roof repaired outside, the revenue it is likely to draw from just three screens is not enough to pay a mortgage and other costs, owners of other Twin Cities theaters say.
"The biggest problem is money," said Tom Letness, owner of the refurbished Heights Theater in Columbia Heights. "Even if you could get the place up and running for $500,000, it would be difficult to make a go of it."
In July, Hy-Vee Foods, the Iowa-based grocery chain that entered the Twin Cities market last year, proposed building a store on the site of the theater and an adjacent grocery. The theater has been closed since 1999 and the grocery since 2013.
Robbinsdale city officials approved the idea last month, but some activist groups and preservation-minded citizens want to save the 1950s-era building. After a petition to boycott the new grocery emerged, Hy-Vee on Aug. 22 said it would delay its plans to build the store.
Friends of the Terrace, one of two groups trying to save the theater, is seeking a court order to halt demolition, said attorney Erik Hansen, who represents the group.
David Leonhardt, board chairman of the Save the Terrace Group, said volunteers are considering a feasibility study, which could cost $10,000 to $15,000, to present alternative uses for the building to its owner, a New York investment firm called Blackstone Group, or a prospective future owner.
The Terrace's fate sits in limbo until the next hearing with a judge on Sept. 13. The building cannot be demolished until the court rules on the temporary restraining order, Hansen said.