Is Ballantyne planned to be confusing or did it just happen that way?

Have you been to the cinema at Ballantyne? If so, you may have some thoughts to share on the topic that Hickory’s Avis Gachet shared. Gachet, one of the Observer’s community columnists this year and a faithful Forum writer, e-mailed me this. My response is below. And planners, it would be especially interesting to get your thoughts on this one:

Mary, Yesterday a friend and I spent the day in Charlotte. At noon we sought out the Ballantyne Theatre in Ballantyne Village. It was a nightmare to find. (Fabulous movie, however–“Away from Her.”)

I had gone to the Website for directions. Found a phone number, and, after talking to two people, obtained rather poor directions. Found Johnston road off 485–no problem.

THEN…we began to negotiate our way through the maze. I had NOT been told to look for the tower. Even so, we found ourselves turning around in parking areas and going out of our way several times before we zeroed in on it. We were ten minutes late for the movie as a result.

Is that the current planning style in Charlotte? I have to say that I would opt for a strip mall instead.

I am NOT a timid driver. I drive in Washington, D.C. and New York City. I would drive to England if someone told me I could. One of these days if there is a fire or a crisis in that area, people will be frantic trying to evacuate.

Do you approve of that sort of design? This would be a real turnoff to many older drivers.
Give me a theatre in a former big box–with a parking lot one can find easily. I guess that I am a Philistine.


But I am one person who is old enough to: 1) see various fads come and go (each having the absolute answers, of course); and 2) feel that making things fancy is not always making them better.

I would not THINK of making a casual run for something from one of those shops near the theater. It would take an Act of Congress to get me there more than a very few times a year. Generally speaking, I will go anywhere–at least once.

Here’s my response, only partly tongue-in-cheek.
Avis, I’ve been to Ballantyne Theatre and I fully understand your frustration. They need some signs that tell you where to turn! I’ve been there 2 or 3 times and usually I turn at the wrong place.

From what I see, it’s the planning style everywhere to use movie theaters in large shopping center-mixed use developments. There’s one at a Ballantyne-like shopping center in Mount Pleasant, S.C., called Towne Center-or-maybe-Centre (not that it’s in the center of town.)

But I don’t think the planners have any set “style” other than to encourage connectivity of streets, etc., etc. They tend to assume the retailers and developers will be savvy about getting people into their developments. And as we all know, sometimes they aren’t savvy at all.

And then you can’t discount the old Charlotte tradition of just figuring that people who are from around here will learn their way around and the other people, well, they’re not from around here, are they? Example: Myers Park and its Queens Roads.