The Bucks County Drive-In opened in 1951. This drive-in closed in 1998 and has been demolished. A shopping center has replaced this former drive-in. It was located at 401 Easton Road, Warrington, PA 18976 had two screens and could accommodate 750 cars that’s a lot of people if you use to pack them in the way we did. This was a popular destination in the Philadelphia area for many many years and as far as we know was one of the last operating Drive ins in Pennsylvania.
Drive In History
Richard Hollingshead, father of the drive-in, capitalized on the success of the drive-in restaurant, extending the in-your-car-convenience to include the silver screen. He patented the idea three years after conception. The first drive-in opened in Camden, NJ in June 1933.
In the 1970s, many drive-ins began to close. However, most drive-ins were still making money when they closed. Closings were primarily due to the fact that as cities spread out, property value sky-rocketed. Location, combined with seasonality, is often cited as the biggest problem to face drive-ins. Standard fare at the drive-in was 2nd-run movies or 1st-run sexploitation films during this decade.
In the 1980s, Hollywood studios started to make double and triple prints of 1st-run movies, as a result, drive-ins were able to start picking up 1st-run films. Between 1987-1990, the number of drive-ins falls from 2,507 to 910. Drive-in attendance drops off by two thirds.
By the 1990s, there are less than 600 drive-ins left in the US. There were 815 screens total, as of December 1997. Over 3,000 had disappeared since their hey day in the 1950s. On the bright side in this decade, several new drive-ins have been built circa 1990, including sites in New York and Alabama. Drive-in expansion occurs in several states including Wisconsin and Maryland.