12 August 2025

Sotiria Liangis opens up on 'magnificent' Manuka hotel - the cinemas, what's changed and the critics

| By Ian Bushnell
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The five-star Manuka hotel will open early in 2026. Photo: Ian Bushnell.

The developer of the Manuka Hotel has confirmed that it will only offer one cinema after operators still recovering from the pandemic and hit by the streaming revolution refused to invest in a new multiplex.

Sotiria Liangis also informed Region that a hotel operator had been engaged and elaborated on the changes she had made to the plans, stressing that the building would adhere to the Crown lease and the approved conditions.

She also opened up about recent criticism of her and the development, saying some people did not understand what she was trying to achieve with a project about which she was passionate.

Mrs Liangis said she was as disappointed as anyone about Event Cinemas (formerly Greater Union) being unwilling to continue its association with the site, but the company lost $200 million during the pandemic and was not investing anywhere in new theatres.

She tried Hoyts and the independents, but none were willing to get on board, telling her a new venture would not be viable, especially with new release films available online.

One 80-seat theatre has been salvaged, to be run by the hotel, but Event will provide a new release film for public screenings.

“It’s not compulsory for me to build cinemas, but I wanted to really have a cinema and I created one cinema,” Mrs Liangis said.

“It’s going to be open to the public and my hotel operators can use it anytime they want. It’s very luxurious, very lovely.

“That’s what I have done at my own discretion.”

The adjacent area where the other three theatres were to be located will be open space.

Mrs Liangis said that, according to industry figures she had seen, the Canberra market was saturated, with many screens nearby in Woden and the city.

A view from Franklin Street where the terrace garden will be and the main entrance.

Other changes to the plans include the siting of the pool and an uncovered outdoor garden on the Franklin Street side.

The pool was originally going to be on level two in an enclosed recreation area facing Franklin Street, but Mrs Liangis said her neighbours along Franklin Street had concerns about noise and overshadowing, which she rejects.

Nonetheless, the pool and recreation facilities were moved to the basement at the Cathedral end, and a landscaped terrace garden with outdoor furniture would now occupy the setback on Franklin Street.

Facilities such as the pool, sauna and gym would be for hotel guests to use, but the public could also gain access through a membership scheme.

The 192-room hotel itself would be a five-star state-of-the-art facility operated by a big international company, but Mrs Liangis could not say who until the company made the formal announcement.

“They’ll be the ones to advertise when they’re all done and ready, but they’re very excited,” she said.

“They really believe it’s one of the best [buildings] …. if you’re looking at the design, the main entrance, it looks absolutely magnificent.”

Mrs Liangis was working with the hotel company’s interior designer on the fit-out.

The hotel would also include dining and bar facilities, meeting rooms, a ballroom and retail shops, which would all be left to the hotel operator to run.

The building would be completed by the end of the year, followed by the fit-out and then a grand opening early in 2026. She hoped people would appreciate it.

The Cathedral end of the Manuka hotel Stage 2 project.

Mrs Liangis, 85, has been in the development game since 1967 and has a fearsome reputation.

She is on site most days, sometimes with the help of a wheelchair because of her knees, and works at a large desk, covered in dog-eared plans marked with her ‘scribble’, in the corner of the completed Stage 1 of the hotel.

While she has the well-earned reputation as a tough operator in a tough industry, recent media attention has irked her.

“It’s upsetting when people are making comments and they’re not true,” she said.

People often forget that she was the one who saved the previous building’s cinema and installed the first multiplex in 1989 and 1991.

“There were two little elderly ladies sitting on the couch, and I can hear them saying, ‘Isn’t that sad, the cinema is closing down,'” she said.

“And I come home and I say, ‘Why are we closing them down? Why can’t we keep the cinema running?’ And we did exactly that.”

Mocking descriptions of her pride and joy as ‘faux Parisian’, dark and sterile belittled what she believes will be an architectural achievement that will stand the test of time.

Mrs Liangis said no one had told her the building was a bad building, although, as usual, some of the online commentary has not been kind.

“Everybody says, ‘Wow!'” she said.

“Nobody has come along to say this is a bad building. This is a solid concrete building that will stand up for the next 300 years. That’s the way I wanted it.”

Solid concrete walls and double glazing will insulate guests from each other and the heavy traffic on Canberra Avenue. The ground-level floor-to-ceiling glazing is 10mm unbreakable laminated glass, ensuring internal quiet and oodles of natural light.

The structure itself is going nowhere, supported by dozens of extra concrete piers sunk deep into the ground and 100 cubic metres of mass concrete.

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Mrs Liangis said it was her building and she wanted it to be of the highest quality.

“They’re my properties. I’m not selling them to sell the problem to someone else,” she said.

“I don’t want to go near it for the next 10 years to try to see if something goes wrong.

“We’re not building that way. We’re building solidly and it’s supposed to really stand up for many years without any problems.”

Mrs Liangis said people crucify you, but the hotel would help Manuka 100 per cent.

“You sit it back and you say, ‘Look at what we have created,'” she said. “Something wonderful, something for people to use for many years to come.”

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I am getting a bit fed up with much of the negative media reporting I have read lately and over the years on Sotoria Liangis. There is no one more committed to this city than Sotoria Liangis. A woman I have so much respect for and always known as Mrs Liangis.
I have so many fond memories of Mrs Liangis and her late husband Angelo, fitting and making our school shoes when we first moved to Canberra as well as over the years as Canberra has developed. This woman is a trailblazer and has done so much for our city through her hard work, dedication and philanthropy. A woman who has made it in a man’s world, progressing our city through her vision and ideas, never putting up with any bullshit.
Mrs Liangis is a tough cookie but always willing to listen, back down and admit when she is wrong.

As a Manuka local and parent of kids who go to school nearby (and no not retired and shambling or old) I love it. Thanks for investing SL. Manuka is great, there is a wide range of generations from kids to older and people who don’t like it and are ageist are probably just used to grotty Braddon with its pavement pizzas and dubious throngs and cheap box like housing calamities even they can’t afford. Stay away. We don’t want you.

BRIAN ASHCROFT8:55 pm 14 Aug 25

Respectfully Mrs Liangis has only evere been about growing her own wealth. The loss of the Capital Theatre is a Heritage failure.

Well done Mrs Liangis.
This building will certainly lift Manuka, which has been suffering a downturn for some time.
Quality accomodation should also benefit the existing restaurants and shops.
The design is quite charming – a contrast to the ugly boxes going up all over Canberra. Disappointing, but not surprising, there were no takers for the cinemas. Would have been a great venue for movie and lunch.

I think the building is fabulous. It has a very urban European style, and adds a touch of class to Manuka. I can’t wait till it’s open and thriving. It’s (very) disappointing about the cinema, but a business decision. Times have changed and Manuka is better off with profitable businesses than a struggling theatre.

I was looking forward to the return of cinemas to Manuka, I saw 2001 the Space Odyssey in the original Capitol Theatre. Later, I took my wife to dinner in Manuka and to a film afterwards. Sometimes, we would have coffee in a Manuka cafe after seeing a film. The replacement cinemas did not have to be a multiplex. A twin cinema in the basement like the old Electric Shadows in Civic would work. I am still hopeful that Mrs Liangis will change her mind and let a local operator run a twin cinema on the site. Guests at the hotel would appreciate the cinemas and a more lively Manuka.

People just love to complain on the internet. At worst, this is fine.

To add to my earlier comment. Even a small twin, well managed, might have a chance. A single? Unlikely at best. Manuka’s appeal is waning. A comparison with Double Bay, Sydney, where after the closure of the very popular twin, became a night time ghost town as the well patronised bookshop, small eateries, and laye opening newsagent closed, is useful. Eateries, shops and cinemas go together.

The new hotel however is a plus.

Sad. But effectively doomed to fail. Single screen cinemas can’t cut it these days (unless in a town council run mixed use ‘town hall-type’ operation). But as in poor politics, its ultimately in the hands of the punters, who, post Covid have become lazy. And the CCP’s China has never been brought to account for the massive economic losses from their culbability in Covud’s release …. to say nothing about the deaths.

Merlin Johnson3:27 pm 12 Aug 25

You can say whatever you like about Mrs Liangis and her building, but I have nothing but complete admiration and respect for any 85 year old woman who clearly doesn’t need to work, yet turns up on site every single day. In a wheelchair if necessary. And by all accounts, takes no crap from anyone on site. I would be stunned if there was another 85 year old woman anywhere in the country doing what she does. She is not perfect, and she is a pretty easy target for all the keyboard warriors- but on balance, she does a lot more good for this town than she does harm. Who really cares if her building survives for 300 years or 30 years. Time and history will be the only judges. At least she is having a red hot crack. And that’s more than you can say for most of us.

Anyone who went to the Manuka cinema would know it was a cramped dump, well past its use-by date. Its departure is no loss. Nobody went there when it was a cinema, and now that there are huge, modern competitors in every town centre, frankly it’s silly to suggest this is anything other than a reflection of actual customer demand. Anyone who wants to take actual commercial risk to revitalise Manuka – which let’s be honest, is becoming a ghost town – should be commended. I’m sure there have been concerns about developers ignoring community concerns, but at the end of the day, the development has been approved, and is following the rules that we elect the government to make.

Peter Graves9:32 am 12 Aug 25

You tried the majors – did you try LIMELIGHT ? The one in Tuggeranong – by any chance ?

Scott Meikle8:37 am 12 Aug 25

Mrs L. Is a tenacious operator, made some good money starting from a shoe shop. However sometimes money doesn’t buy you class, not the best looking building for 2025, I understand she seems to be keeping the “Manuka aesthetic” keeping the design of the older buildings, however.

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