The Villa to star in new role: rug gallery

Published: Friday, May 21, 2004 11:07 p.m. MDT
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The Villa Theatre will avoid the wrecking ball, but it will not reopen as a movie house.

Hamid Adib, owner of Adib's Rug Gallery at 3142 S. Highland Drive, said Friday that he has purchased the landmark theater at 3092 S. Highland and will eventually move his business into the Villa building.

Adib purchased the theater for an undisclosed price from the Harmons grocery store chain, which bought the 3.3-acre Villa property in February 2003. The theater's tenant, Carmike Cinemas, declined an offer to lease the building at that time and left. The building has been vacant since.

Harmons representatives could not be reached for comment Friday.

Adib said he has been selling hand-woven Persian and Oriental rugs in the Salt Lake area for more than 18 years. When he moved to Utah and made it his home, he said, his family enjoyed attending movies at the Villa.

"When we heard, we were upset that the theater was closing, because we have such great memories," Adib said. "Then we kept learning that many developers and many different groups wanted to level it and build office buildings . . . I have so much appreciation for old buildings. I thought, 'I wish there was a way we could buy this place and just preserve it.' "

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Adib said he called Harmons and made an offer, which led to the sale. But he is not buying the Villa to show movies.

"I wish I had the experience of showing movies . . . and could preserve the facility as it was," he said. "I don't have that kind of ability."

Instead, he said, he will fix up the theater building and use it to feature what he calls a different kind of art — his rugs.

"I want to feature some of these and some other types of artwork and create, in a sense, a museum-like atmosphere that people can come in and enjoy and at the same time remember their past good memories," Adib said.

"The plan is to fully preserve it, keep it overall in the form of a theater, as far as the facade or the architecture of it."

The seats, curtains and other items already were removed from the interior of the theater and sold, he said. "Everything is completely taken out, and what we are taking over is basically a shell."

He said the theater needs "a drastic amount of help" because it has not been kept up for some time. He does not know how long it will take or how much it will cost to renovate, he said, but he already is meeting with architects about the project.

"We have no rush, because where we are we are doing our work," Adib said. "Hopefully that will be ready sooner than later and we can get that space. . . . I'm doing (this business) mainly because I love it and it's my passion, and that theater has the kind of charm and character architecturally that will suit our purposes very well.

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The colorful marquee above the entrance to the Villa Theatre lights up the night at the famous landmark's final screening on Feb. 18, 2003. (Jason Olson, Deseret Morning News)
Jason Olson, Deseret Morning News
The colorful marquee above the entrance to the Villa Theatre lights up the night at the famous landmark's final screening on Feb. 18, 2003.