The Guild Theatre (originally the Taylor Street Theatre) was a theatre in Portland, Oregon, in the United States.
The Guild was the last remaining single-screen theater in Downtown Portland, completed in 1927. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, the Guild screened classic films, advertised as "Oregon's finest film classics theater". Later, it changed to showing second-run films. The theater has been closed and out of use since 2006, but a renovation began in 2017, for an unknown purpose. The 5,000-square-foot (460 m2) building was originally called the Taylor Street Theatre until 1947, when J.J. Parker changed the name to the Guild after purchasing the theater. It closed in 2006.
The Guild was the home of the Northwest Film Center and the center's Portland International Film Festival from 1998 to 2006. The center had been allowed to lease the theater from its owner, Tom Moyer, for just $1 a year. A proposal in 2010 to renovate and reopen the theater did not come to fruition.
In late 2016, Tom Moyer's company, TMT Development, the property's owner, began work on remodeling the building. TMT also owns the adjacent Studio Building (a nine-story office building), and the work on the theater building is part of that $8 million project to renovate both buildings. In January 2017, the company told the Portland Business Journal that the former theater space is being remodeled for a new tenant whose identity could not yet be revealed, due to a non-disclosure agreement. At that time, TMT was forecasting that its part of the remodeling work would be completed by early spring 2017, and the new tenant would then take over the site, in preparation for its own work on the former theater. Renovation of the marquee took place later in 2017.
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