Cascade Center

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The Cascade Center at the Riverplex is a shopping, dining, and entertainment complex located in downtown New Castle, Pennsylvania. Opened in 2006, the complex offers both indoor and outdoor facilities. It occupies much of the site of the Cascade, which was the first movie theater owned by Warner Bros. The complex is situated at the intersection of East Washington Street and Mill Street. As of 2013, Riverplex Partners, Inc. owns the complex. The top three stories are rented by Refresh Dental Management as their corporate headquarters.

The Warners, residents of nearby Youngstown, Ohio, were sons of Polish Jews wanting to break into the newly-established and burgeoning film business. After successfully presenting a used copy of The Great Train Robbery at Idora Park in Youngstown,[1] the brothers traveled to New Castle to screen the movie in a vacant store on a site that would later become the Cascade Center.[2] This makeshift theater, called the Bijou, was furnished with chairs borrowed from a local undertaker.[3][4] In 1906, the brothers purchased a small theater in New Castle near the Bijou, which they called the Cascade Movie Palace, taking its name from the nearby Cascade Park. They maintained the Cascade Movie Palace until 1907, when they went into film distribution.

In the next couple of years, the building that housed the Bijou would host various other businesses while the Cascade itself would eventually be demolished and replaced by a parking lot. The buildings themselves were abandoned by the 1980s when New Castle, like most other Rust Belt cities, saw the collapse of the steel industry.

By the mid-1990s, only two businesses were operating on the site that would later become the Cascade Center: Main Street Clothiers & Custom Tailors, a men's suit shop, and the B&O Railroad Federal Credit Union. The credit union was located in a separate building on a site bordering Mill Street and the Neshannock Creek; built on the site of the Cascade after it had been used as a parking lot.

In 1996, parts of the Bijou building collapsed onto East Washington Street, one of the city's main thoroughfares. The portion that collapsed was next door to Main Street Clothiers, which had just opened three years before. The city of New Castle was very close to issuing a condemnation notice, however due to the building's historical significance, it has remained intact for decades. New Castle then announced development plans to refurbish it into what would eventually become the Cascade Center.

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