The Chimes Theatre was a movie theater at 5631 College Avenue. It was built in 1917 for Beach & Krahn, and designed by Cantin & Cantin. It included a row of four large, musical chimes on the front, hence the name. 1
The Chimes was built with 1,276 seats. It underwent a number of remodels over the years. In 1920, architect James Plachek did the first remodel. In 1929, the projection booth was re-equipped for sound. 3 The exterior was redone in 1931 by original architect A.A. Cantin and renamed The Uptown. By the late 1930s it was renamed back to the Chimes Theatre, and it received yet another exterior remodel by Cantin in the 1940s. 1,2 (NB: It still appears as the Uptown in the 1939 directory. 4)
It closed as a theater by the early 1950s. In February, 1958, a skating rink called Chimes Skateland ("Chimes Skateland—Just a Little Nicer") was added on the second floor. A short-lived trampoline was added in 1960, and a bowling alley, Chimes Lanes, in 1961. 1,2
It was badly damaged in a fire in 1963 and closed. The remains were demolished in April of 1965 to make way for the Grove Shafter Freeway and the accompanying realignment of Shafter Avenue. 1,2,6
Links and References
- Chimes Theatre CinemaTreasures.org
- Theatres of Oakland by Jack Tillmany and Jennifer Dowling, Arcadia Publishing
- Chimes Theater Reopens Tonight With 'Talkies' Oakland Tribune February 14, 1929
- Polk's Oakland 1939
- ohrphoto.oaktheaters.006 Oakland History Center, Oakland Public Library
- Photograph of boys watching demolition Oakland Tribune April 20, 1965
- New Chimes Theater Opens in Oakland Berkeley Daily Gazette December 15, 1917