Have you ever wanted a little place of your own to show films?
-just a quiet little room away from the TV and the blender you can darken whenever you feel like it, have some people over and make big soundtracks until all hours without waking somebody up?
-well, here it is!
I present to you 1235 W 5th St., Davenport, Iowa: to most, just an empty warehouse out in the Midwest, to those of us that read our film boxes, this is the former home of Blackhawk Films and it's for sale!
https://www.ruhlhomes.com/for-sale/h...040315-855851/
It's running a little under $100,000, and to me that's a bargain. Where I live you can't even buy a house for a Hundred Grand! (It may need a little work!)
This is a storied building: for a generation this place pumped out 8mm, Super-8 and 16mm prints and all those truckloads of sales newsletters. I have a few of them and even knowing the emptiness of this picture, reading them today is downright intoxicating!
I like to think when Kent Eastin sat with his projector in their sales reel "Movies that Talk and Sing", it was in this very building.
It has even had a life apart from celluloid: it started life as a brewery, which means it has large, thick walled rooms that stay perpetually cool. During Blackhawk days they took advantage of these for film storage.
I read that after Blackhawk left, there was a derailment on the mainline that runs past, and this place was literally hit by a train. Repairs were made, and even though still empty, the Blackhawk Building still stands proud!
h
-just a quiet little room away from the TV and the blender you can darken whenever you feel like it, have some people over and make big soundtracks until all hours without waking somebody up?
-well, here it is!
I present to you 1235 W 5th St., Davenport, Iowa: to most, just an empty warehouse out in the Midwest, to those of us that read our film boxes, this is the former home of Blackhawk Films and it's for sale!
https://www.ruhlhomes.com/for-sale/h...040315-855851/
It's running a little under $100,000, and to me that's a bargain. Where I live you can't even buy a house for a Hundred Grand! (It may need a little work!)
This is a storied building: for a generation this place pumped out 8mm, Super-8 and 16mm prints and all those truckloads of sales newsletters. I have a few of them and even knowing the emptiness of this picture, reading them today is downright intoxicating!
I like to think when Kent Eastin sat with his projector in their sales reel "Movies that Talk and Sing", it was in this very building.
It has even had a life apart from celluloid: it started life as a brewery, which means it has large, thick walled rooms that stay perpetually cool. During Blackhawk days they took advantage of these for film storage.
I read that after Blackhawk left, there was a derailment on the mainline that runs past, and this place was literally hit by a train. Repairs were made, and even though still empty, the Blackhawk Building still stands proud!
h
If these walls could only talk!
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