After many years of operating as the Improv Comedy Club, restaurateur Tony Riviera and Barry Bloch purchased The Improv with the intent of continuing operating the venue as The Improv. Riviera and Bloch discovered old photos, historical information and articles about the Showbox and decided to recreate the venue as its original look and reopened New Year's Eve, 1995 as The Showbox Comedy and Supper Club which they operated for several years before deciding to sell the venue. Riviera went on to open numerous restaurants up and down the West Coast.[5][6]
Local preservation advocates, including Historic Seattle, Friends of Historic Belltown, and Vanishing Seattle, submitted a landmark nomination for review by the City of Seattle's Landmarks Preservation Board in June 2019.[11] The board unanimously decided to grant the Showbox landmark designation on July 17, 2019, preventing the theater from being demolished.[12] The property owner filed a lawsuit against the city of Seattle. Claims of damages were dismissed by the court, but a trial was scheduled for August 2019 regarding other claims.[13]
On November 19, 2019, the Historic Seattle group announced a partnership with the Seattle Theatre Group and submitted a formal offer to purchase the property. The partnership would retain AEG as the operating tenant through at least 2024.[11]
Showbox SoDo opened in 2007 and belongs to the "Showbox Presents" family. It is located at 1700 1st Avenue South, Seattle, Washington, a few blocks south of T-Mobile Park and Lumen Field. It takes its name from the SoDo district, an area south of downtown Seattle and Pioneer Square.
A converted-warehouse-turned-concert-venue, the Premier nightclub opened in the building in early 2004[14] but closed in 2005. In Fall 2006, the Fenix Underground, a club that spent 15 years in two locations in Pioneer Square, took over the space but just as quickly folded when it filed for bankruptcy in May 2007.[15] The Showbox stepped in and added the venue to its family, opening as the Showbox SoDo in September 2007.[15]
The space has wood-beam and brick architecture. With a capacity of 1,800, it is larger than its elder sibling, which was renamed The Showbox at the Market to distinguish the two.
The Showbox SoDo was originally built as a truck warehouse in 1935 for John Eddy Franklin, who was also responsible for the Columbarium at Evergreen Washelli Funeral Home. The main part of the warehouse had a dirt floor and a gas pump.[citation needed]
While Hansen holds onto the property as a potential back-up arena plan, should Climate Pledge Arena fail to secure an NBA team, the Showbox SoDo continues to operate at its location.