Archive for May, 2008
The Movies at Polo, 9700 Two Notch Road (near Sesqui): July 2005 37 comments
The Movies at Polo opened and closed while I was living in Aiken. I can't recall specifically that I ever saw a show there, though I was in town more weekends than not. I think this place is another example of Pat Berman's underfannied theory of the Columbia movie market. There are simply not enough fannies-on-seats week-in-and-week out in Columbia to support the number of theaters we used to have. Of course in this case, it probably didn't help either that a new theater was in the offing at the nearby Village at Sandhills, though I'm pretty sure The Movies at Polo gave up the ghost before that multiplex opened.
Unlike the Capiton Centre Theatre we can't see with any specificity which movies actually closed this operation, but there has been no lack of bombs in recent years. I like to think it was Son of the Mask.
At any rate, we can see that, as usual, it wasn't a shortage of parking that did the place in:
For restaurant buildings, the last stage is the "Asian Buffet" stage. For other retail space, the last stage is the "Self Storage" stage:
As an aside, The Movies at Polo was actually a rather misleading name, as the place is not that close to Polo Road. The Movies Near Sesqui would have been better.
UPDATE 11 September 2011 -- As mentioned in the comments, there has long been a sign indicating that a funeral home is coming to the property. In fact, the sign has been there long enough that it seems unlikely now. I guess there might be enough room in the old parking lot for such an establishment and its own associated parking, but it would seem rather crowded. The self-storage place mentioned above has been open in the old theater building, and several adjacent new buildings for a good while now.
Also, as indicated in the comments, commenter Andrew has pinned the closing date for this place as July 2005, so I have updated the post title to indicate that. Also added the full street address.
UPDATE 27 February 2014 -- Well, I'm not entirely sure what happened here. I always wondered how Shive's could possibly build a funeral home on this site given that Monster had the old theater building, leaving only the old parking lot open -- and funeral homes need lots of parking for visitation and organizing the funeral processions. At any rate, the sign proclaiming this as the new Shive's site sat there for years with no action, and it has finally been replaced with one saying that the new funeral home will be built on Trenholm Road Extension instead (but Monster's sign still welcomes Shive's..)
UPDATE 21 April 2014 -- Just for the record, Shive's has broken ground on Trenholm Road Extension & Dawson Road now:
UPDATE 7 June 2016 -- Either vandals, the wind or the property owner have done a number on the old sign:
UPDATE 22 March 2017 -- I see the parking lot has finally been sold:
Coldstone Creamery, 4840 Forest Drive, Suite 148 (Trenholm Plaza): May 2008 1 comment
When I first saw Coldstone closed last week, I wasn't going to make a post on it because it seemed clearly temporary, but I was puzzled when the down-time stretched into this week. What kind of high-tech equipment does an ice-cream store have that can't be fixed by a commercial refrigeration repairman in a few hours?
I hope it is temporary, but this is similar to the way the Bruster's closing started. Coldstone is pretty good too, though they make it very embarassing for both the customer and the staff to tip there.
Update 10 June 08:
Well, it's pretty much as I feared. The "equipment problem" signs were disingenuous as closing signs often are. Based on what I see inside the store now, it's gone.
This is the second upscale creamery that Forest Acres has lost recently. Luckily there's still old reliable Baskin Robbins up the street and Zesto's chocolate dipped soft cones (umm!) across from Richland Mall..
UPDATE 21 April 2010: Added full street address to post title.
Rising High Natural Bread Company, 1508 Main Street: 30 Apr 2008 5 comments
The Free Times reports the closing of the last Rising High store on 30 April.
As I said in my post on the Harden Street location, Rising High seemed like it would be the kind of place I would like, but for some reason, I never warmed up to it. I never ate at the Main Street location but one commenter says it had been going downhill for a while. Here's a review from an out-of-towner that seems to say the same thing.
I hope something goes in there though; I would hate another empty storefront on Main.
UPDATE 16 July 2009: Added 'Natural Bread Company' to the post title so as to give the full name of tthe place. Added the street address. Added a link to a review from back in the day.
Sonny’s Bar-B-Q / Po Folks / Sapelo Dock / Lizard’s Thicket Fish Camp / Capt. John’s Mayflower Restaurant / Fran’s / Angus Omaha’s Beef Palace / The Zone Sports Bar and Restaurant / The Gold Club, 6246 Two Notch Road (at Arcadia Lakes Drive): 1980s etc 24 comments
I first became aware of this building when it was "Po Folks", and I think that was the original tenant. Po Folks was, the name suggested, a sort of fauxy-down-home type of place where they served "country cookin'", served the drinks in mason jars and wrote the menus in misspelled "Southern" dialect. That's not really a criticism; there's a place for that type of thing, and I remember the food as being pretty good. Certainly my parents liked it a good bit, and we ate there fairly often. I don't know exactly what happened to Po Folks -- they are still around as a chain, but apparently they have contracted a great deal and no longer have any locations in South Carolina. I do know that they continued to have a Myrtle Beach location for a while after the Columbia location closed, but it's gone now as well. Today the chain seems to be largely a Florida operation with a few other restaurants in Alabama, Arizona and California.
After Po Folks left, the building went through a long period of "musical concepts". I think next it may have been the original Fran's location (Fran's later opened "Little Fran's" on Forest Drive as a smaller second store, which became simply "Fran's" when the original Fran's closed and which itself recently closed). After Fran's closed, the building was vacant for a while prompting some distruntled former patrons to put up a "Bring Back Po Folks" sign on the property. I lose track after that, but at some point it was one or possibly two different night-clubs and then an urban-comedy club. The Jim Moore used car dealership has been there a couple of years now, so possibly the site now has a stable tenant, though it's doubtful they can supply you a Blue Ribbon Chicken Dinner.
UPDATE 22 June 2009:
Well, not that stable! Moore For Less is now gone. (Also added the street addres to post title above).
UPDATE 13 March 2011: The building has been knocked down. See the Moore For Less link for pictures.
UPDATE 29 June 2021: Updating the post title with more former tenants of this building thanks to commenter Paul's research and adding tags & map icon.
Hollywood Video, 1005 Bower Parkway: 2007 2 comments
Just to make it a trifecta of closed Hollywood Video locations, I finally got around to going by the old Harbison location and taking some pictures to go with the ones from Two Notch and Garners Ferry.
Apart from the general woes of the chain (discussed in the Two Notch post), it just strikes me that Harbison Blvd is an awful location for anything you'll be going to on a regular basis (like for renting and returning DVDs). The traffic is just too bad too often.
UPDATE 23 October 2009: The actual address for this store is 1005 Bower Parkway, not Harbison Boulevard. I've updated the post title.
UPDATE 21 May 2010 -- The place is now a Casual Male XL store: