Piedmont Drive-In

2426 Piedmont Road NE,
Atlanta, GA 30324

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birdie1924
birdie1924 on May 28, 2022 at 9:41 pm

I remember going to the piedmont drive in theater, listening for clues on lindbergh drive for the $50,000 key then they tore down the drive in to build an arlan’s store the when it closed up it then became the Atlanta Flea Market and a Marta Rail Station.

kennerado
kennerado on May 19, 2020 at 7:08 am

The “Parking Palace” from the late 30’s was actually located further up the road at the site where the Buckhead Crossing shopping mall is. Its in a 1938 aerial image and only had about 4 rows of ramps.

JFB
JFB on January 27, 2019 at 9:13 pm

This drive-in was a sister drive-in to the Stewart Drive-in. They both were closed at the same time for an Arlans department store. Arlans was similar to K-Mart. The Arlans building here became a flea market, then demolished. The Arlans building at the Stewart location is still standing but is now a Kroger.

rivest266
rivest266 on April 4, 2018 at 4:51 pm

It reopened (or new drive-in built on the site of the Parking Palace) on September 10th, 1947. Grand opening ad in the photo section.

The newspaper article zooms in when you click (or point) on it.

rivest266
rivest266 on April 4, 2018 at 4:49 pm

Both “Parking Palace” was closed in 1942 according to the article below.

Article about drive-in history in Atlanta Parking palaceParking palace · Tue, Jan 21, 1975 – 15 · The Atlanta Constitution (Atlanta, Georgia) · Newspapers.com

rivest266
rivest266 on April 4, 2018 at 4:48 pm

Is this the ad you are talking about? The Constitution newspaper has no such ad on September 3rd, 1939.

Parking palaceParking palace · Sun, Oct 17, 1937 – 33 · The Atlanta Constitution (Atlanta, Georgia) · Newspapers.com

rivest266
rivest266 on April 2, 2018 at 7:51 pm

a “Parking Palace” opened on Piedmont Road 6 miles out of Atlanta on September 29th, 1936. Is this the same drive-in? If so, then this was the 2nd drive-in in the area.

WillDockery
WillDockery on January 19, 2017 at 9:09 am

I do think the Zesto’s is still there, as of a few months ago… a couple of other fleeting memories are of a Victoria Station that was still standing at the corner of Lindberg and Piedmont, I never went there but I remember seeing it quite a few times.

StanMalone
StanMalone on October 11, 2016 at 3:27 pm

Based on further comments, I think that it is safe to say that when the drive in was demolished it was followed by Arlans (a K-Mart style discount store), then the building was used as the flea market, then torn down for the Lindberg MARTA station. The Hastings Nursery was always at the northwest corner of the Cheshire Bridge, Lindberg, LaVista intersection across the street from the now closed up Varsity Jr. Hastings later moved to Brookhaven across the street from the Cherokee Plaza but is now closed.

The Kiddie Land at Broadview Plaza was gone by the time my family moved to Atlanta but I remember the K-Mart well as it was the first two story discount store I had ever seen. It had a good layout as all of the yard, garden, and hardware was on the ground floor which opened to the back parking lot and allowed close up parking since most people parked in front in the Piedmont lot.

The GEX store mentioned in a previous comment was located on the I-85 access road between Shallowford Road and the old North 85 Drive In. The Richway store also mentioned above was located on North Druid Hills Road across from Briarcliff High School and almost next door to the old Georgia Cinerama Theater. I do not go into this traffic clogged area unless I have to and did not know that the Zestos was closed. It must have operated there for 50 to 60 years. The Sizzler Steakhouse mentioned by Will was a regular stop for me as a group of us would usually go there following the Monday morning managers meetings once Georgia Theater Company moved their offices from the Fox to Lenox Square. Last time I was in the area the old Shoney’s was still there in its derelict condition although someone has told me since that it has finally been torn down.

The only change I would make in any of these later comments is regarding the Great Southeast Music Hall. Actually, the theater was there first, opening in about 1969 with the addition of the Broadview 2 in 1972. When Weis sold out and #2 became George Lefont’s Screening Room, the old #1 became the music hall. It then moved in 1978 to the site of the old Cherokee Theater.

Lots of movie theater history at this intersection as well as many memories for those of us who grew up in this area. Now it is just a traffic nightmare occupied by big retail and office developments with nothing unique to distinguish them from countless other such developments around the city.

galateasca
galateasca on September 25, 2016 at 12:58 am

The flea market was there..I still have a framed picture hanging up that I bought there. The Zestos is now closed at this location. Bennie’s Shoes was there for years. There was never a Richway to my knowledge, but there was a K-mart, the Screening Room and the Great Southeastern. In the back of the plaza pre-1975 was a children’s amusement part called Kiddie Land. I do remember GEX, but I don’t remember it being at Broadview/Lindburgh Plaza, but off I-85 closer to Spaghetti Junction. I think the building may even still be there.

I went to the Screening Room a great deal, but the drive in was before my time.

jumboloan
jumboloan on September 18, 2016 at 4:04 am

I recall there being a Richway

bongostella
bongostella on April 9, 2013 at 6:38 pm

No one seems to remember that there was a GEX department/grocery store on the site.

It became an indoor flea market in the 70’s
and was the largest building to be torn down
for MARTA.

timothyscott
timothyscott on March 30, 2012 at 3:10 pm

Mr Malone account is accurate. The theater was torn down for Arlans. Hastings was never on the corner of Piedmont and Lindberg. Spent many nights in the baack seat of my parents car Watching Elvis movies, How the West Was Won, and can remember the largest crowd for The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance. The line went thru the winding drive and overflowed out onto Lindberg. Remember ther had a board up by concession stand that you matched your ticket number and could win goodies at concession stand. When I was real small use to be scared to go to bathroom because you had to go down those 3 or 4 steps to get to there. Very fond memories of this place and Hastings. We would shop for Christmas tree every year at Hastings. Loved playing by the pond while parents shopped. Zesto’s was always a treat. Kiddieland at Broadview Plaza was place to have Birthday parties.

WillDockery
WillDockery on March 10, 2012 at 12:10 am

Correction, that was Harvest Moon Saloon next to Ken’s Tavern, not Moonshadow Saloon, which was on out near Decatur.

WillDockery
WillDockery on March 9, 2012 at 11:52 pm

My memories of the area are from around the 1979-84 time period when I lived and worked near there, worked at Carolina Lumber & Supply a bit to the south of this area, on Plaster Bridge Road, and the memories are very vivid. At that time, the Atlanta Flea Market was there, in a building that looked like it was once a department store, although I reckon it could have been the former location of Hastings Nursery, which by that time was located out Lindberg Drive at the corner of Cheshire Bridge Road, a few blocks to the east of Piedmont Road, across from the Varisty Jr.

Next to the Flea Market on one side was Shoney’s (the caving in building can still be seen there today), and across the street, across Lindberg, from the Flea Market was (in 1979-80) the empty building that once was a Copperfield’s nightclub.

Across from there was the small strip that housed Ken’s Tavern and Moonshadow Saloon, a couple of hopping nightspots for us working class types of the early 1980s. Past that going up Piedmont, and across from the fairly huge Flea Market space was a Sizzling Steaks, and a Zesto’s, which, amazingly, is also still in the same spot. Then Broadview Plaze, which was anchored by K-Mart, Picadilly Cafe, and the Screening Room Theaters mentioned earlier. What isn’t mentioned is that before becoming movie theaters, the location was the Great Southeastern Music Hall, where many great rock, pop and country acts performed… including the Sex Pistols with their American debut shows!

Piedmont Drive in was before all this by over a decade, and it was forgotten by the time I arrived.

Drive-In 54
Drive-In 54 on January 30, 2012 at 10:47 pm

Added Aerial from 1960

Jester
Jester on August 28, 2011 at 5:01 pm

I’m not sure all of Mr. Malone’s recollections are accurate. The Piedmont Drive-In was followed by Hastings Nurseries, a huge nursery and retail gardening facility. From there it went to retail and restaurants, and from that to Marta. And I think that the Arlan’s on Ponce de Leon became a huge Asian market before it was torn down for the present large shopping center (Home Depot, Whole Foods, Borders Books,Office Depot, et cetera.). I don’t think the government ever had anything to do with the old Ponce de Leon site. The City of Atlanta bought the old Sear’s distribution center/retail store directly across Ponce de Leon, and it has since been sold to private developers.

WHITEFIELD
WHITEFIELD on June 21, 2009 at 12:41 am

Here is a 1950’s ad for The Dixie’s Drive-In Theatres, The Piedmont Drive-In Theatre and The Stewart Drive-In Theatre
View link

StanMalone
StanMalone on May 26, 2009 at 4:07 pm

Link to the Drive In ladder ad in the Atlanta paper on August 5, 1964. The blogger has also written up some of his memories of working at these places. Worth a look if you are interested in the drive in culture from 1970 – 1990.

View link

StanMalone
StanMalone on April 16, 2007 at 8:27 am

While it may have been rather plain on the inside, from outside it was the most impressive looking of all Atlanta Drive Ins. The screen backed up to Piedmont Road and could be seen from a good ways down LaVista Road. It was decorated with neon script “Piedmont Drive In” signage. To get to the box office you drove down the entrance drive through the towering pine trees that dominated the lot. As was the custom in those days the box office had a large warmer so that boxes of popcorn could be sold along with the tickets. The exit was located in the rear of the lot and opened onto Lindberg Drive.

I only had the pleasure of attending a show at the Piedmont one time, this being in 1966 when I was in Atlanta visiting family. The feature was the pleasant but unremarkable “Born Free.” As usual, the co-feature was an older offering from the same film company, in this case Columbia. Although the purpose of the trip was to see ‘'Born Free" it was the co-feature that made the night memorable. It was the first, and only time in a theatre, that I saw ’‘Bye Bye Birdie’‘ although I have watched and enjoyed it many times since. If I watch it enough I may discover why Ann-Margaret calls the title character by the proper name of Birdie in the movie itself, while in the opening and closing songs she sings his name BurHEE. The fact that I attended this showing with my cousins, one of whom is named Anne, and the other Margaret, only made the show more memorable.

Sadly, by the time I moved to Atlanta in 1967, the Piedmont had recently closed. It was torn down and in its place was a K-Mart style discount store by the name of Arlands, or maybe just Arlans. The arrival of this chain was a major blow to the historical past of Atlanta. In addition to the destruction of the Piedmont, another fine drive in, the Stewart Avenue, was also destroyed to make way for another Arlands location. Even worse, they also destroyed the old Ponce de Leon Park baseball stadium where the Atlanta Crackers had played minor league baseball for years until the arrival of the major league Braves in 1966.

As it turned out, these fine Atlanta landmarks had the last laugh as the Arlands chain went out of business within a couple of years. The Ponce de Leon store was taken over by the government as office space and later torn down to make way for yet another strip shopping center. The old Piedmont Drive In location became the site of a major weekend flea market which drew bigger crowds than the drive in or discount store ever saw. That store was torn down and the MARTA Lindberg station built on its site. The front part of the property along Piedmont where the box office and screen were sited became a parking lot and later a huge Bell South office complex.

Across the street at Broadview Plaza, later renamed Lindberg Plaza, two indoor theatres were built in the early 70’s and are listed on this site as the Screening Room. They are also gone as that shopping center was torn down in about 2004 to make way for yet another and still larger shopping center. The way some things change never changes.