TROY – The city is out of one lawsuit tied to development of the former City Hall site at 1 Monument Square, but still mired in another filed by the company that planned to build a multiplex movie theater there.

And the city and Bow Tie Cinemas show no sign they are prepared to settle the lawsuit.

In a new court filing, Bow Tie asserts the city changed the dimensions of the land on which the cinema could be built, a move that destroyed the financial viability of opening the downtown multiplex.

Bow Tie's plan for an 11-screen theater on the 1.2 acre-site between River Street and the Hudson River was scuttled after Judge Development Corp., which owns neighboring land sued the city and Bow Tie amid concern the cinema project would be built in part on parkland along the waterfront, a move that would require the state Legislature's approval.

Bow Tie sued the city, saying it failed to disclose important information about the land. In a recent court filing, Bow Tie offered greater details about why it pulled out of the $22.7 million project. Court papers note that the city proposed shrinking the amount of land available for the project by at least 7,155 square feet, which would have meant the loss of 1,550 square feet for the theater.

As a result, Bow Tie "could not achieve any economic viability for the project based upon ... the city's proposal to reduce the dimensions of the project," the company said.

Bow Tie and the city both said in court papers that the land development agreement the project won’t be revived, clearing the way for the end last week of Judge's case before acting state Supreme Court Justice Michael Melkonian.

Judge filed the lawsuit through two subsidiaries, 251 River Street LLC and 225 River Street LLC, which own the properties on either side of 1 Monument Square. The lawsuit claimed the city had not gained state permission to sell parkland affiliated with the Riverfront Park and had not followed environmental reviews.

Bow Tie wants the city to pay it $246,065 plus interest and legal fees. The amount sought in the lawsuit would cover the repayment of the $60,000 fee the company paid the city when it signed the agreement to develop the site and $186,065 for development costs.

Bow Tie's attorney, Matthew Meisel, and the city's attorney, Andrew Brick, declined to comment on the case.

Bow Tie operates theater complexes in Schenectady, Saratoga Springs and Wilton. Its Troy project was seen as a way to make downtown lively day and night. The cinema was touted as a way to bring 10,000 people into the area each week.

Troy is embarking on its fifth attempt to redevelop the site since City Hall was knocked down in 2011. The city intends to hire a firm to hold three days of planning sessions to find out what residents and businesses want to see on the parcel.

Previous project designs have been criticized by the public as not fitting in with the downtown architecture. Developers in turn have complained that the city had not provided adequate information about the site