THE last picture house
REF: IND_020
Ref: IND_020
GRADE II LISTED ART DECO CINEMA IN DALSTON, EAST LONDON
About
One of London’s most storied independent cinemas, the Rio has been a fixture of Kingsland High Street since 1909, when Clara Ludski converted her auctioneer’s shop into one of the city’s first full-time picture houses. Today it stands as arguably the oldest continuously operating cinema in the UK — a remarkable survivor that wears over a century of cultural life in its fabric.
The building reached its current form in 1937, when cult architect F. E. Bromige remodelled it in the Art Deco style that defines it to this day. His exterior has remained virtually unchanged since, and requires no dressing for period productions set anywhere from the late 1930s onwards. Inside, the original auditorium shell of the earlier Edwardian cinema survives above the current ceiling — two entirely different auditoria, one contained within the other, a configuration English Heritage has described as an exceptionally rare survival.
The main auditorium seats 402 across stalls and circle, its sweeping Art Deco interior lending itself equally to intimate drama, performance-based narratives, music video, and large-scale editorial. A large foyer with kiosk, bar and seating area offers a classic British public interior well-suited to commercial and advertising work. The basement presents a different proposition entirely — the intimate 28-seat second screen, housed within the original 1909 structure, sits alongside the Ludski Bar in a rawer, more atmospheric register that contrasts sharply with the grandeur above. Productions effectively have two distinct looks within a single location.
Beyond the public spaces the building runs deep, with a good-sized projection room, corridors, staircases, offices and landing spaces providing the kind of incidental architecture that productions rarely find in such concentration. Throughout, the Rio has the quality location scouts most reliably seek and least often find — a building that has simply been itself for a very long time, with subdued lighting, quiet ambient conditions, and a layered visual texture that no set build can fully replicate.
Since 1976 the Rio has been run as a registered charity and not-for-profit, governed by community-elected trustees. It remains an active working cinema, and availability is subject to the film schedule — though with sufficient notice, evening hire, longer shooting days, and multi-day bookings can all be accommodated.
Key Features
∙ Grade II listed Art Deco building with largely unaltered 1937 exterior, minimal dressing required for period settings from the 1930s onwards
∙ Main auditorium with stalls and circle seating 402, with strong period character
∙ Intimate 28 seat basement screen within the original 1909 building fabric, a contrasting second look within the same location
∙ Large foyer with kiosk, bar and seating area
∙ Basement Ludski Bar
∙ Projection room, offices, corridors and staircases available for filming
∙ Green room, CRAFT, wardrobe, G&M and catering spaces available
∙ Three phase power on site; WiFi, water and kitchen facilities available
∙ Ground floor and basement fully accessible; circle and projection room via three flights of stairs
Image credit: Location
CAPACITY
Main auditorium: 402 (stalls & circle)
Basement screen: 28
ACCESS
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STYLE
Grade II listed Art Deco independent cinema
SIZE
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painting & decorating
N/A
LOCATION
East London
DOWNLOADS
FEATURES
Art Deco main auditorium with stalls and circle
Intimate 28 seat basement screen
Large foyer with kiosk and bar
Ludski Bar
Full stage in main auditorium
Projection room
Original 1937 F.E. Bromige exterior
SPACES
Main auditorium
basement screen
foyer
Ludski Bar
projection room
offices
SERVICES
N/A
PARKING
Limited parking outside the cinema
OTHER
Active working cinema — availability subject to film schedule
Evening hire longer shooting days and multi-day bookings available with sufficient notice
Green room CRAFT wardrobe and catering spaces available
Bike racks outside