DaveG wrote:It wouldn't be so bad if you drove a Prius![]()
Michael Hughlett wrote:Aldi, which counts the Chicago area as its biggest U.S. market, is a breed of supermarket known as a limited assortment discounter. It carries only a fraction of the items offered in a conventional grocery store, and its shelves are dominated by Aldi's own store brands.
But Aldi claims it offers about 90 percent of the foods people buy most, and at prices up to 40 percent below those of conventional supermarkets, analysts say.
NFriday wrote:Hi- I was listening to Marketplace on WBEZ last week, and on that day they were broadcasting from Ann Arbor. One of their segments was about a new Whole Foods that just opened up in Detroit proper. They mentioned that it was in midtown Detroit, and I looked it up and it is on Mack Ave. WF has two stores in Ann Arbor, and several stores in the more well to do suburbs, but it sounds like they have never placed a store in an area where many of the people that live near the store are on food stamps, and are living at the poverty level. They seem to think that they can make the store succeed though. It is a 21,000 square foot store. It will be interesting to see how well the store does. The city has lost a lot of inhabitants that have fled to the suburbs, and there has even been talk of converting some of the vacant land in Detroit into farms. I think there are a few small farms in the city right now. Hope this helps, Nancy
NFriday wrote:Hi- My sister lived on St. Antoine, right across the street from the med center. She said the immediate area was OK, but not great, but she would not walk three blocks at night from where she lived, and she did not even want to drive three blocks and get out of her car. She did mention about the lack of grocery stores in the neighborhood, and on occasion she would drive to the Eastern market on Saturday. You could get some really good deals there. One Saturday my sister and I helped my father sell peaches and apples there, and when we sold out, we got lots of veggies really cheap, which he ended up giving away to other relatives and people that worked on his farm. I remember that my experience selling at the Eastern Market was way different than what you would find at the Evanston market. I remember that somebody three stalls down from us was selling live chickens, which he killed on the spot. I never went down there to see the show, but you could tell everytime he made a sale.
sundevilpeg wrote:Not included in the Trib story, which reads like a press release:
Whole Foods developer gets $10 million city subsidy
The city is contemplating providing about $10 million from a special taxing district for land preparation, utilities and environmental cleanup at the site, where 5 acres of retail development will be overseen by DL3 Realty, which is managed by Leon Walker. The company and Walker have donated more than $20,000 to aldermen and other South Side politicians.
NFriday wrote:Hi- There is an article in the Chicago Tribune about this new store. Here is the link.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/ ... 8747.story
I am concerned that WF might be over saturating the Chicago area.
Hope this helps, Nancy
NFriday wrote:The South Evanston location though started as a Wild Oats though, and when WF bought out Wild Oats, they had requests to keep both the stores open.
NFriday wrote:Hi-
Is the Park Ridge store going to be any where near Trader Joe's? I believe it is going to be on Touhy right? Thanks, Nancy