KiMo Theater

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Kimo Theater
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Location: 421 Central Avenue, Albuquerque, New Mexico
Coordinates: 35°5′5.99″N 106°39′7.11″W / 35.0849972, -106.651975Coordinates: 35°5′5.99″N 106°39′7.11″W / 35.0849972, -106.651975
Built/Founded: 1926
Architect: Boller Brothers; Robert E. McKee
Architectural style(s): No Style Listed
Added to NRHP: May 02, 1977
NRHP Reference#: 77000920 [1]
Governing body: Private
Interior of the KiMo Theatre
Interior of the KiMo Theatre

The KiMo Theatre is a theatre located at 421 Central Avenue NW in downtown Albuquerque, New Mexico and it is probably the city's best-known landmark. It was built in 1927 in the extravagant Pueblo Deco style, which is a blend of adobe building styles (rounded corners and edges), decorative motifs from indigenous cultures, and the soaring lines and linear repetition found in American Art Deco architecture.[2]

The KiMo was conceived by entrepreneur Oreste Bachechi and designed for him by Carl Boller of the Boller Brothers architecture firm, who conducted an extensive investigation into the cultures and building styles of the Southwest before submitting his design. The theater is a three-story stucco building with the stepped massing characteristic of native pueblo architecture, as well as the recessed spandrels and strong vertical thrust of Art Deco skyscrapers. Both the exterior and interior of the building incorporate a variety of indigenous motifs, like the row of terra cotta shields above the third-floor windows.

The name "KiMo" (literally translated as "mountain lion" in Tewa, and sometimes loosely translated as "king of its kind") was supplied by Isleta Pueblo Governor Pablo Abeita,[3] who won $50 for his suggestion.

By 1977, the theater had fallen into disrepair but was saved from the wrecking ball when voters approved a plan for the City of Albuquerque to purchase the structure. It has undergone several phases of continuing restoration to return it to its former glory and is once again open to the public for performances.

The KiMo Theatre is rumored to be haunted by the ghost of Bobby Darnall, a six-year old boy killed when a water heater in the theater's lobby exploded in 1951. The theater staff maintains a space in a backstage stairwell for gifts and offerings in an attempt to "appease the spirit."[cite this quote] Some claim to have actually seen Bobby's ghost, clad in jeans and a striped shirt.

[edit] References

  1. ^ National Register Information System. National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service (2007-01-23).
  2. ^ For examples of this style of building, see Marcus Whiffen, Pueblo Deco: The Art Deco Architecture of the Southwest (ISBN 0-8263-0676-4).
  3. ^ Breeze, Carla, Pueblo Deco, New York: Rizzoli, 1990, p. 54

[edit] External links