
The project’s second phase will feature a Canopy by Hilton hotel and an office building. Star Cinema Grill is a Houston based dine-in-theater concept that offers our guests first run film releases, an extensive menu, and a full service bar with. The $160-million Studio Park is owned by Olsen Loeks Development. There’s also a Celebration Cinema movie theater, which offers free parking validation. Studio Park’s dining and retail tenants include Funky Buddha Yoga, Leo’s Coney Island, Malamiah Juice Bar and Eatery, Pump House Frozen Yogurt Bar and the flagship restaurant One Twenty Three Tavern. We are excited to provide a place for the community to enjoy.” “Our ultimate goal was to create an experience for people in the heart of downtown. “The idea of Studio Park started as a much smaller project and snowballed into what it is today,” said J.D. Studio C planned Studio Park over the last decade, and the project broke ground in April 2018. Loeks.Īnother nod to West Michigan’s theater history greets you from the mezzanine as you walk through the cinema’s front door.The 62,500-square-foot development features several dining and retail options, a 200-seat concert venue called the Listening Room, a nine-screen movie theater, 106 apartments, a piazza and 900 parking space.

To dream big,” said Celebration Cinema President J.D. “It’s a reminder to our own staff, as we walk through, about what’s possible. 27, 2019 photo shows some of the bricks from Studio 28 in Wyoming incorporated into Celebration Cinema at Studio Park in downtown Grand Rapids.īricks from Studio 28, the country’s first multiplex that closed in 2008, are part of a wall near the entrance to the theaters. In true movie theater tradition, they’ve also added some “Easter eggs” to the project.

27, 2019 photo shows theater seating inside Celebration Cinema at Studio Park in downtown Grand Rapids. The first movies at Celebration Cinema at Studio Park were set to roll at 5 p.m.

(WOOD) - Celebration Cinemas at Studio Park, the centerpiece of the $160 million project bringing the first movie theaters to downtown Grand Rapids since the 1960s, is open for business.
