Before Pinball Pete’s and the Galleria Mall, Ann Arbor had a Campus Theatre
Pete #Pete
ANN ARBOR, MI — For over 65 years, 1208-1214 South University Ave. has been a destination for arts and entertainment near the University of Michigan campus in Ann Arbor.
Before it became the Galleria Mall and home to tenants such as Tower Records and Pinball Pete’s arcade in the 1990s, it was the Campus Theatre.
Today’s mall, which still houses Pinball Pete’s and several other tenants, now faces demolition to make way for a 17-story high-rise.
From the archives of The Ann Arbor News, here’s a look back at the South U site’s long and interesting history.
1956 — construction starts
In September 1956, The News documented the start of construction of the Campus Theatre, a new movie theater from the Butterfield company, which operated various theaters in Ann Arbor, including the Michigan and State theaters.
The one-screen theater was built to cater to the art-movie audience that had patronized the Orpheum, Ann Arbor’s first theater built for movies in 1913.
The Main Street theater known as the Orpheum closed in 1957, the same year the Campus opened.
1957 — gala opening
The News reported on the gala opening for the Campus Theatre in March 1957, noting the entrance lobby featured modern decor with carpeted floors and an acoustical ceiling with built-in lights and walnut trim.
A far door beyond the lobby led to the 1,054-seat auditorium, where opening-night guests got to see the film “Lust for Life” starring Kirk Douglas, as well as a “Mr. Magoo” cartoon.
It was reported to be one of only a few new theaters across the entire United States over the previous decade.
The building had two sections — the theater on the east side and areas for three stores on the west, along with a partial basement and partial second floor.
1960s — Italian comedy
“During the height of the 1960s foreign-film craze, crowds lined up along South University to see the latest Fellini or Bergman work,” local historian Grace Shackman once wrote of the Campus Theatre in a report on the city’s cinema history.
By 1967, with some questioning the showing of films like the murder mystery “Blow-Up,” there were talks in Ann Arbor about creating a censorship board to review “potentially obscene materials,” The News reported, while noting most films shown in Ann Arbor already were subject to Detroit police censorship.
1980s — end of an era
By the 1980s, “Star Wars” was all the rage and the Campus showed both the “The Empire Strikes Back” in 1980 and “Return of the Jedi” in 1983.
In late 1984, it was announced that Butterfield was selling most of its Michigan movie theaters, including the State and Campus theaters in Ann Arbor, to a company in Illinois.
In early 1985, unionized projectionists who were let go filed a complaint with the National Labor Relations Board to protest their firings as a violation of labor law.
By that point, the Campus was Ann Arbor’s last-remaining, single-screen commercial movie theater, but it wouldn’t be around much longer.
In September 1985, talks of a South U retail development called the Galleria were underway. Developer Glen Gale sought someone to buy and move an old Victorian-style house at 1218 S. University Ave. to make way for what was initially planned to be a four-story building with two levels of shops and 12 apartments above. It was to be built between the Campus Theatre and an old gas station on the corner.
The theater’s eventual closing gave rise to a new idea to incorporate it into the Galleria. News photos from January 1987 showed the empty marquee of the shuttered theater when there were talks of turning it into shops.
In July 1987, the old Victorian house was torn down to make way for the Galleria to be attached to the old theater and filled with new stores and a food court. Another adjacent building, formerly the Great Escape pinball arcade, also was to be torn down, The News reported.
1990s — Galleria Mall arrives
An advertisement in March 1990 showcased the nearly complete Galleria Mall designed by Hobbs and Black Architects, announcing its tenants and food court offerings. After some delays, the mall officially opened in early 1991.
“Tower Records blasts into Ann Arbor market,” was the headline in September 1991 about the new record store from the nationally known Tower chain, which made its first entry into the Midwest at the Galleria where it sold a wide selection of CDs.
“Galleria survives freshman year,” was the headline in January 1992 when it was reported, despite being hard to miss with its glassy frontage and neon signage, it was hard to find a mix of tenants that worked. Tower Records and the eclectic Caffe Fino coffee house were cited as early successes in the 75%-occupied building where the lower-level food court concept never took off and was being eliminated.
Burger King and the Sports Mania sporting goods store were among two of the ground-floor tenants inside the mall in the 1990s.
The News further reported in December 1992 the mall was facing financial troubles, including a defaulted mortgage, delinquent property taxes and a lawsuit from anchor tenant Tower Records. Metropolitan Federal Bank sued the original owner, Campus Commercial Properties Inc., for $6.4 million for defaulting on a 1988 loan.
Throughout the rest of the 1990s, the Galleria saw the arrival of new longterm tenants, including Pinball Pete’s taking over the old food court space and the U.S. Post Office moving its Nickels Arcade branch there. Both remain today, along with various other tenants, including UM.
Tower Records eventually left in 2000 when its sales no longer justified the rent, according to Jeff Hauptman, managing member of the group that owned the Galleria then.
The mall later underwent significant renovations in 2007 that further changed its interior configuration, resulting in more floor space for tenants and a smaller atrium.
2023 — demolition proposed
The mall’s days may be numbered now as Georgia-based Landmark Properties plans to buy it from Oxford, Hauptman’s company, and demolish it to build another apartment high-rise similar to others that line South U and cater to a growing need for UM student housing.
The big question surrounding the project: What’s going to happen to Pinball Pete’s?
Supporters of the arcade came out in full force at a Dec. 5 meeting.
Landmark and Oxford say they’re committed to finding a way to keep Pinball Pete’s in Ann Arbor, which may mean relocating it.
“Oxford has been working with Pinball Pete’s for years, and helped them into their current location,” Oxford spokesperson Margaret Wyzlic said in a statement. “We’ll be there to help them find their next one, if and when they need it. It appears we have some time before they’d need to vacate their current spot, which will hopefully give us some time to be creative and intentional in finding the best fit for them.”
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