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Moonlite Theatre

1949 establishments in Virginia2013 disestablishments in VirginiaBuildings and structures in Washington County, VirginiaDrive-in theaters in the United StatesNational Register of Historic Places in Washington County, Virginia
Theatres completed in 1949Theatres on the National Register of Historic Places in Virginia
MoonlightTheatre 0925
MoonlightTheatre 0925

The Moonlite Theatre, also known as the Moonlite Drive-In, is a historic drive-in theater located near Abingdon, Washington County, Virginia. It was built and opened in 1949, and remained one of the few drive-ins still open in Virginia until finally closing in 2013. The theater reopened briefly in 2016 but closed shortly after due to a pending lawsuit. Remaining original buildings and structures include the 65-foot-tall screen tower and office wing, the ticket booth, the concession stand/projector booth building, and the neon-illuminated attraction board at the edge of the highway. The theatre includes 454 parking/viewing spaces designed as reverse-incline ramps.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Moonlite Theatre (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Moonlite Theatre
Lee Highway,

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Latitude Longitude
N 36.673888888889 ° E -82.05 °
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Address

Lee Highway 17501
24210
Virginia, United States
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MoonlightTheatre 0925
MoonlightTheatre 0925
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Heartwood – The Southwest Virginia Artisan Gateway

The Southwest Virginia Cultural Center and Marketplace (formerly Heartwood) is a visitor center, music venue, artisan marketplace, and community space located in Southwest Virginia in Abingdon, Virginia and is the gateway to regional craft, music, food outdoors, and local culture. The Southwest Virginia Cultural Center and Marketplace is the largest effort to market Southwest Virginia as a single, unified destination to benefit the economy of the entire region. The building and its combined initiatives will contribute to a sustainable economy by highlighting the unique natural assets of the region with the purpose of attracting tourism and high-end creative economy businesses. 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The Southwest Virginia Cultural Heritage Commission, established in 2008 by the Virginia General Assembly and transitioned to the Southwest Virginia Cultural Heritage Foundation in 2011, works as the lead in developing and coordinating the creative economy in Southwest Virginia. Through a supporting non-profit, the Friends of Southwest Virginia, businesses and individuals help artists, craftspeople, localities, nonprofits and entrepreneurs mobilize and succeed. The creative economy movement is defined by innovative business development techniques. From the arts and music of the region to cultural goods and services capitalized through tourism to research and development, the joint work of the Foundation and the non-profit is revolutionizing the rural economic development system of Southwest Virginia and providing new jobs for the region. 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