Thursday, August 28, 2025

Blinn Bryan Campus featuring Schulman 6

The full Blinn campus as of spring 2010, outlined in red-orange. College Park Center is the brown-roofed building toward the bottom specifically.
Class is back in session for the fall, so what better time to start this first week with a college-oriented post? I've briefly talked about the Blinn Bryan Campus in the past (particularly when it came to the shoddy offerings in the Student Center) but I wanted to give another overview with it. It's been a while since I last set foot in Blinn (not too many good things to say about it) but the first three buildings in the campus were dedicated in January 1997 with the others being filled out a few years afterward. The Taco Bell mentioned in the old thread did indeed operate in the Student Center building (that's the second from the left in the main campus, if you were looking at it from above) from approx. 2000-2003, though from 2010 to 2015 Maui Wowi set up a kiosk as well. The far left building housed the student center before it was bumped to the far building near the "College Park Center" campus...before that it was the administration building (back in the early 2010s)1...and there was a strip mall before, notably housing DoubleDave's PizzaWorks (approx. 1998-2006)...and overall wasn't much to write home about (I took no pictures there, though I only had my crummy old cellphone camera back then).

The only real thing on campus of note was the "College Park Center" building, which was "connected" to campus by a 200-yard crosswalk through the parking lot. While I can't comment on the current Schulman's Movie Bowl Grille undergoing construction (or rather, lack thereof) at South College Avenue and Villa Maria Road, for decades the Schulman family operated theaters in Bryan. One of these was off East 29th Street. The Skyway Twin Drive-In opened in 1969 but closed around 1981, to be replaced by the Schulman 6 (which operated on a much smaller footprint) and opened January 1982, featuring the following movies: Modern Problems, Reds, Cinderella2, Sharky's Machine, and Raiders of the Lost Ark. While these movies all appeared later than what is in other cities (a common problem in Bryan-College Station at the time), it appears that at some point Schulman 6 became a second-run movie house, though I can't tell when (another article mentions that Cinemark had some sort of exclusivity contract when it opened, so possibly around 1993). There were interesting parts found in research, like the murder of theater manager Don Cravens Jr. in November 1988 (found dead the next morning)3. In April 1997 it closed and reopened in September as College Park 6 featuring first run movies (the first movies were Deep Impact, Titanic, The Big Hit, Lost in Space, The Odd Couple II, and The Object of My Affection.

I saw a few movies at Schulman 6 (renamed College Park 6 in the late 1990s) before it closed less than five years later.4 I don't remember which movies I saw specifically here (as opposed to the Cinemark Hollywood USA theater), though I do remember I saw Dinosaur here.

After it closed, it was purchased by Blinn and renovated into classrooms, with the first classes held in summer 2003. The largest theater was turned into lecture halls (keeping the seats from the 1997 renovation, albeit cleaned and re-installed), with the others also being converted to classrooms. Later on, the projection rooms upstairs were turned into studios for art classes (at some point an elevator installed and some other changes to make it ADA-compliant, but it still felt cramped up there)5. For a brief time in the early 2010s a mural was painted outside but that disappeared after a year or two.

1. This is now the college bookstore. The administration moved out to the Tejas Center at some point around the late 2000s.
1. Before the Walt Disney Classics VHS releases (colloquially, the "Black Diamond" collection) and the "Disney Renaissance", Disney re-released its classic animated films (basically up to and including The Jungle Book) in theaters on a semi-regular basis, with Cinderella in particular getting re-released no less than five times.
2. The way the paper phrased it indicated it wasn't immediately obvious that he was murdered, and while it was officially a robbery, the fact that it also involved another man who was Cravens' old lover makes the details a little more sketchy.
3. I tried to find what the last movies shown by the theater were. The newspaper printed the movies for Cinemark but in the last weeks of College Park 6's operation, it just read to "call for showtimes".
4. Records show the elevator was installed in 2010.