An iconic ex-cinem in Chelsea in Chelsea has been placed on the market, with the potential to turn it into a hotel, housing or a member club.
The closure of the cinema, which Hugh Grant called “strangely unbearable”, triggered headlines last year.
The site, which originally opened in 1930 as Forum Theater, became the 26th cinema in the Picturehouse family in December 2019.
Between 1970 and 1996, auditoriums, the stage area and the air towers were divided into six film road rooms for cinemas.
Picturehouse renovated the interior 2019 before he ceased operations in July last year and stripped the construction of all bio -related uses.
Future potential uses for the site include main housing, a hotel, a member club or hospitality and leisure uses, according to Savills.

Troubled times for cinema
The property of Chelsea Art Deco is owned by Martin’s properties, which has previously said it would try to maintain biofacility.
Last year, however, it said to keep film capacity proven “increasingly challenging” because of the “serious challenges that the British bio industry faces in recent years in reducing the admissions, exacerbated Fulham Road through increased local competition and a building that is unsuitable for a cinema from the 2000s.”
Cineworld, which owns Picturehouse, closed 11 seats in the UK last year in the middle of an extensive restructuring plan aimed at reducing its large debt.
Simon Burke, co-founder of Revolting Spaces-a Collection LGBTQ+ hospitality sites in London which owns independent film The Ardzner-stored City is Last fall, upcoming tax increases will aggravate problems in the bio industry.
“The entire sector, especially areas with lower margins such as independent theaters and cinemas, will take a hit as a result of the incoming tax environment. These taxes are nothing but political elections.
“Cinemas are culturally important spaces, these changes will undoubtedly lead to independent cinemas struggling to stay open or expand,” he said.