Wednesday, November 30, 2011
Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market, Others Eyeing Closing Andronico's Store on Telegraph Avenue in Berkeley, California
Northern California Market Region Report
News/Analysis
On November 25, 2011 Renovco Capital, the new owner of Community Markets, announced it will close the store at 2655 Telegraph Avenue in Berkeley, California as part of its strategy to turn the once 14-store food and grocery retailer around, leaving it with just five stores in Northern California's San Francisco Bay Area.
[Read our 'The Insider' columnist's November 26 column: Andronico's to Close Another Store in Berkeley as Part of 'Comeback' Strategy for details. Also see what he wrote about Tesco's Fresh & Easy and Andronico's in this May 30, 2011 column: May 30, 2011: 82-Year-Old Grocer Andronico's Needs A Sugar Daddy of Sorts: 'The Insider' Suggest Tesco and its Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market Might Fit the Bill.]
The Telegraph Avenue store is the second unit Andronico's has closed in Berkeley in as many months.
It's the third store the grocer has closed since July of this year.
Last month Andronico's closed a store on University Avenue in Berkeley. In July the retailer closed a store in Palo Alto.
Andronico's Community Markets started 2011 of with eight stores, down from a high of 14 units less than a decade ago. It now has five supermarkets - two stores in Berkeley and one unit each in San Francisco, Los Altos (South Bay Area) and San Anselmo (Marin County).
Renovco Capital bought 82-year-old Andronico's out of bankruptcy court of $16 million. (See the stories linked at the end of this piece for details.)
The closing of the Telegraph Avenue Andronico's supermarket, which has been a fixture at the location in Berkeley for many decades, offers a second store site opportunity for Tesco's Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market in the Easy Bay Area University city (Cal Berkeley), where it's been looking for locations for some time.
In October Andronico's closed a store on University Avenue in Berkeley, and as we reported on October 18, 2011 here - Look for Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market to Grab Closing University Avenue Andronico's Supermarket in Berkeley CA ... If it Can - Fresh & Easy is interested in the location.
In addition to Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market, a couple other retailers, including a dollar store chain, are interested in the now vacant University Avenue Andronico's site, according to our sources.
Those same sources told us yesterday that Fresh & Easy's real estate folks have already expressed an interest in the closing Telegraph Avenue Andronico's store.
Additionally, we're told a natural foods chain and CVS Pharmacy, in addition to Tesco's Fresh & Easy, are also interested in the Telegraph Avenue location, which our 'The Insider' columnist reported on November 26 will likely close by the end of the year.
Andronico's is already holding a merchandise liquidation sale at the Telegraph Avenue store, offering products for deep discounts, which is what it did when it closed the University Avenue supermarket. It took the grocer just a couple weeks to liquidate most everything at the University Avenue location.
Our commercial real estate and other sources say one possible scenario involving Tesco's Fresh & Easy and CVS Pharmacy in the Andronico's Telegraph Avenue location would be for the two chains to divide the building in half, putting a Fresh & Easy fresh food and grocery market on one side and a CVS drug store on the other.
Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market and CVS did just that in a former Albertsons supermarket location at 32nd and Clement Street in San Francisco's Outer Richmond District.
The Fresh & Easy store at 32nd Avenue and Clement Street opened June 22, as we reported that same day in this story: Tesco's Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market Opens First Store in San Francisco - in Outer Richmond District.
The CVS drug store, which shares the building with the Fresh & Easy grocery market (view the floor plan here) opened about a month later.
The Telegraph Avenue Andronico's store in Berkeley has about 20,000 square-feet of selling space, based on our estimation. That would be enough room to put both a standard version (10,000 square-feet of selling space) Fresh & Easy store and a CVS drug store that's about the same size (or slightly smaller) as the unit at 32nd and Clement in San Francisco.
As an alternative, Tesco could put one of its Fresh & Easy Express stores (3,000 square-feet of selling space inside a 4,000 square-foot exterior) in the Telegraph Avenue Andronico's building, although going with a standard sized Fresh & Easy market makes much better sense, in our analysis.
But it's still early. And we suspect additional food retailers will be interested in the Telegraph location.
No deal has been done between the landlord and any retailer yet, according to our sources.
Of the two locations, the vacant Andronico's on University Avenue and the soon-to-be vacant unit on Telegraph, the Telegraph Avenue location would be the better of the two for Tesco's Fresh & Easy if the grocer were to take just one of the sites, if it can, in our estimation and analysis.
The main reason for this is because a Fresh & Easy (or any other) store at the location would benefit greatly from the heavy pedestrian and auto traffic on Telegraph Avenue.
Additionally, the Telegraph Avenue location is closer to the University of California at Berkeley campus than the University Avenue site is, which is another big plus, because our research and reporting over the last 4-plus years shows that the Fresh & Easy format tends to be most popular among the millennial consumer segment, as well as college and university students.
Both the University and Telegraph Avenue locations offer excellent potential for Tesco's Fresh & Easy however. And commercial real estate buildings that can house grocery stores doesn't open up all that often in Berkeley.
Additionally, the Telegraph Avenue location, to a greater extend, and the vacant Andronico's building on University Avenue to a lessor but significant extent, both also have the potential to be excellent locations for the two farmers market format chains - Sprouts and Sunflower - both of which are putting a major emphasis on opening new stores in Northern California, including in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Berkeley is the ideal demographic for both farmers market style grocery chains, and as noted, grocery store (even smaller format) commercial real estate doesn't become available all that frequently in Berkeley.
Related Stories
November 26, 2011: Andronico's to Close Another Store in Berkeley as Part of 'Comeback' Strategy
October 30, 2011: 'The Insider' Offers Some Advice He Suggests the New Owners of Northern California's Andronico's Markets Should Take Post-Haste
October 18, 2011: May-to-October at 82-Year-Old Andronico's Markets: New Owner, 2 Stores Closed ... Now What?
May 30, 2011: 82-Year-Old Grocer Andronico's Needs A Sugar Daddy of Sorts: 'The Insider' Suggest Tesco and its Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market Might Fit the Bill
See these links - Fresh and Easy Northern California and Fresh and Easy San Francisco Bay Area - for additional related stories.
Saturday, November 26, 2011
Andronico's to Close Another Store in Berkeley as Part of 'Comeback' Strategy
The Insider - Heard on the Street
On October 17, 2011 San Francisco Bay area-based Andronico's Community Markets and its new owner, Renovo Capital, said in a press release announcing the closing of its store on University Avenue in Berkeley, California that it didn't plan on closing any of the shrinking grocery chain's remaining three stores in the University city (Cal Berkeley) where it's had a major presence for decades with four supermarkets.
In my column the following day - October 18, 2011: May-to-October at 82-Year-Old Andronico's Markets: New Owner, 2 Stores Closed ... Now What? - I said this (below in italics):
"The new owner (investment firms Renovco Capital and Rosewood Private Investments) said yesterday that it doesn't plan to close any of the remaining three stores in Berkeley. But it wouldn't surprise me in the least bit if the investment firms aren't forced soon to close one of the remaining three Andronico's stores in the city, even though I believe it would like to keep all three for reasons of having a better retailing critical mass in Berkeley.
My predicted candidate for closure in Berkeley, if it comes, is the Telegraph Avenue Andronico's unit, which over the last couple years has lost considerable sales to a nearby Whole Foods Market store and Berkeley Bowl, a very popular and high volume local two-store independent grocer. Both Berkeley Bowl stores are located in the city."
Yesterday, Andronico's said in a prepared statement that it will close the Telegraph Avenue store in Berkeley.
Adam Alberti, who's acting as a spokesperson for the grocer and its new owner, said yesterday that the specific date the store will be closed has yet to be determined. I'm told by my sources though that Andronico's will most likely close the Telegraph Avenue store by the end of the year.
The closing of the Berkeley supermarket leaves Andronico's with just five stores - two units in Berkeley (East Bay area) and one store each in San Francisco, Los Altos (South Bay Area) and San Anselmo (Marin County) - down from a high of 14 units less than a decade ago.
Prior to July 2011 there were eight Andronico's grocery stores in the San Francisco Bay Area.
So far this year Andronico's has closed three supermarkets - a unit in Palo Alto in July, the store on University Avenue in Berkeley last month, and now the Telegraph Avenue-Berkeley store, which of the three was the largest unit in terms of square-footage.
In a follow-up column on October 30 - 'The Insider' Offers Some Advice He Suggests the New Owners of Northern California's Andronico's Markets Should Take Post-Haste - I offered Renovco Capital and Bill Andronico (who remains president of the grocery chain his family owned for 82-years until last month) a five-step playbook of suggested actions to take immediately regarding the turning around of Andronico's.
One of those action steps including the closing of an additional store, as you can read in the October 30 column linked above.
I also suggested Andronico's senior management team do a complete review of the chain's operations, marketing, merchandising and promotional functions. The closing of the Telegraph Avenue store is part of that evaluation process, which began around the first week of November.
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If you bake it will they come? A selection of cakes on display in the bakery at an Andronico's store this month. |
Both stores were fully-stocked and ready for the Thanksgiving holiday. The fresh foods departments - produce, meat, bakery and deli-prepared foods - all looked good, as did the numerous displays throughout the store.
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Andronico's is using the signs above to communicate to shoppers it's stocking the stores and back in business. |
But last week the two stores I visited - and I have a history of knowing what the two units look like at their best - were attractive and well-merchandised.
In my first column about Andronico's financial struggles, on May 30, 2011 here - 82-Year-Old Grocer Andronico's Needs A Sugar Daddy of Sorts: 'The Insider' Suggest Tesco and its Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market Might Fit the Bill - I suggested one of the first things the grocer should do was to establish a social media presence, particularly on Facebook and Twitter, which is something it wasn't doing at the time.
As I noted in my October 30 column, three weeks later, on June 20, Andronico's Community Markets became active with a Facebook page, and on July 29 launched a feed on Twitter (@andronicos1).
In that same October 30 column (as one of the five action steps I suggested the grocer take immediately), I suggested Andronico's "Hold a 'Thanksgiving' community celebration at each store, thanking shoppers for sticking with Andronico's through tough times - and letting them know better days are coming soon," along with promoting the events on its Facebook page and Twitter feed.
Andronico's did just that in mid-November. For example, take a look (here) at the Thanksgiving-themed customer appreciation days the grocer has been hosting at its stores this month and promoting on its Facebook page. The grocer also used its Twitter feed to promote the "Thanksgiving" customer thank you events.
Andronico's also took advantage today of the nationwide small business Saturday event that's being promoted as the shop locally/small business version of Black Friday.
The grocer created the attractive poster pictured at top to promote the event, touting its stores as the place to shop locally for food and groceries today.
Andronico's Community Markets has also been conducting a variety of special promotions in its stores over the last few weeks, including a fall food festival at its Shattuck Avenue store in Berkeley that featured food samplings from the store's fresh foods departments and tastings conducted by numerous specialty foods vendors, like Dulce Chutney, pictured above.
The event also featured local guitarist Lucas Gonze (below) performing in the wine and spirits department at the Shattuck Avenue-Berkeley Andronico's store.
It's been about a month since Renovco Capital officially took over ownership of Andronico's, although its been providing financing for the small chain since around August-September of this year.
The senior management team and store employees have hit the ground running in the last 4-6 weeks, getting the remaining stores back in shape and promoting the "Comeback."
There's much more to do - and I will elaborate on my playbook for Andronico's, which I began in my May 30 column, continued on October 15 and October 30, and recapped here today, in the near future.
The future looks much better for Andronico's Community Markets (I still think the new owner should drop the community markets from the name and return back to the original Andronico's Markets) than it did just a couple months ago. But, as noted - there's still a long way to go in what is a very competitive market region.
Related Stories
October 30, 2011: 'The Insider' Offers Some Advice He Suggests the New Owners of Northern California's Andronico's Markets Should Take Post-Haste
October 18, 2011: Look for Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market to Grab Closing University Avenue Andronico's Supermarket in Berkeley CA ... If it Can
October 18, 2011: May-to-October at 82-Year-Old Andronico's Markets: New Owner, 2 Stores Closed ... Now What?
May 30, 2011: 82-Year-Old Grocer Andronico's Needs A Sugar Daddy of Sorts: 'The Insider' Suggest Tesco and its Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market Might Fit the Bill
>You can read all of our 'The Insider' columns at this link - The Insider - along with all past coverage about Andronico's here.
Tuesday, October 18, 2011
Look for Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market to Grab Closing University Avenue Andronico's Supermarket in Berkeley CA ... If it Can
Companion Story - October 18, 2011: May-to-October at 82-Year-Old Andronico's Markets: New Owner, 2 Stores Closed ... Now What?
Look for Tesco's Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market to grab the lease on the Andronico's grocery store on University Avenue in Berkeley, California that the new owners of the six-store supermarket chain announced yesterday it will be closing soon, if it can strike a deal to it and the landlord's liking before another grocer does.
Investment firms Renovo Capital and Rosewood Investment Capital, which last Thursday acquired 82-year-old family-owned Andronico's through its $50 million Renwood Opportunity Fund partnership for about $16 million, said yesterday they're closing the University Avenue store, which is one of four Andronico's grocery markets in Berkeley. The closing will leave Andronico's with six stores, three in Berkeley, and one each in San Francisco, San Anselmo and Los Altos.
Andronico's filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in August, listing debts of $10-$50 million, with assets of about the same amount. Renovco Capital, which among other things provides financing to financially struggling companies, has kept Andronico's operating since August by providing it with about $5 million of asset-secured debtor-in-possession financing.
Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market has been looking for store locations in Berkeley for some time as part of its launch into Northern California early this year.
So far the fresh food and grocery chain has opened 14 stores in the region, 12 of which are in the San Francisco Bay Area. Berkeley is in the East Bay Area, where almost half of those 14 Fresh & Easy stores are located. Fresh & Easy has no planned locations to date for Berkeley, where space for new grocery stores is difficult to find.
We happen to know from sources internal to and that work closely with Tesco's Fresh & Easy that the University Avenue Andronico's store in Berkeley has been on the El Segundo, (Southern) California 182-store fresh food and grocery chain's radar screen, should it be closed.
Now that Andronico's new owners have announced the closure of the University Avenue store (something our 'The Insider' columnist said in a May column was likely and wrote about in his column today, linked at the top), new owners or not, we're told Fresh & Easy wants the location if it can get it can strike a deal. In fact, according to our sources, both the building's landlord and representatives of the City of Berkeley's economic development department plan to talk to representatives of the grocery chain about the soon-to-be-vacant grocery store as early as this week.
The City of Berkeley's economic development team also plans to reach out to other grocers about taking over the University Avenue Andronico's store, a member of the staff told us yesterday.
In our analysis the location has the potential to be a good one for Tesco's Fresh & Easy.
Iconic grocer Trader Joe's recently opened a new store on University Avenue, not far from the Andronico's location. The Trader Joe's has taken considerable business from the store. However, in our observation and analysis, it was Andronico's overall financial problems that hurt the University Avenue store's sales performance over the last couple years more so that the opening of the Trader Joe's, although it's opening was significant.
In terms of other grocers, the Andronico's location is sort of a mixed bag, depending on the food retailing format. For example, we don't see the Bay Area's three leading grocery chains - Safeway Stores, Save Mart/Lucky or Raley's - being interested in the University Avenue store, which is under 20,000 square-feet.
However, the University avenue location is a potentially good one for natural-organic foods chains like Sprouts Farmers Market, Sunflower Farmers Market and Whole Foods Market. At one time natural foods chain Wild Oats, which was acquired a few years ago by Whole Foods, had a small store (about 5,000 square-feet) on University Avenue near the Andronico's market. But the store was closed over a decade ago as part of then Wild Oats' decision to close what were a handful of stores it operated in Northern California.
The Andronico's location also offers potentially good opportunity for local Bay Area independent grocery chains like Mollie Stone's Markets and Lunardi's, both which operate supermarkets that offer both mainstream groceries and specialty selections.
Both Sprouts and Sunflower Farmers Market have big plans for Northern California, focusing on the Bay Area and Sacramento region. We expect both grocers to look at the site, assuming Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market doesn't grab the lease this week.
Monday, August 2, 2010
Safeway Unveils Plans For New 'Lifestyle' Format Store Designed to Fit Today's Berkeley, California Lifestyle

Northern California Market Special Report - San Francisco Bay Area
Pleasanton, California-based Safeway Stores, Inc. isn't letting its less than stellar second quarter 2010 profits stop it from planning new stores in its San Francisco Bay Area home base market.
On July 22, Safeway reported a profit of $141.3 million, or 37 cents a share, down from $238.6 million, or 57 cents, a year earlier, a whopping 41% decrease. The prior year included a tax gain of 14 cents. Revenue rose 0.6% to $9.52 billion, as same-store-sales excluding fuel fell 2.5%.
Safeway's total sales were $9.5 billion in the second quarter of 2010, essentially flat compared to $9.5 billion in the second quarter of 2009.
The Northern California-based grocery chain's gross profit declined 32 basis points, to 28.55% of sales in the second quarter of 2010, compared to 28.87% of sales in the second quarter of 2009.
Safeway said price-cutting measures and deflation are largely the reason for the 41% quarter-over-quarter profit drop.
While this is true, and the recession has played a big part in Safeway's price-cutting, what's also true is that Safeway (along with other conventional supermarket operators like Supervalu, Inc.), has been having to aggressively price-cut because of increased competition from discount food and grocery retailers like Walmart, Costco and others on the price-focused end and specialty grocers like Whole Foods Market, Trader Joe's and others on the higher, or more specialty-oriented, end of the spectrum. It's sort of a conventional supermarket chain sandwich, with Safeway being the meat and the two different types of grocery formats - discount and specialty - being the two slices of bread, pushing from both ends.
This phenomenon is no less the case in Safeway's home San Francisco Bay Area market, where it's facing increased competition on all fronts - from disounters to specialty grocers.
Even when the economy gets substantially better it's going to be difficult for Safeway, along with Supervalu, and Kroger, the three leading U.S. supermarket chains, to raise prices much because of this existing and growing alternative format competition, as well as due to the competition among each other and other conventional supermarket format competitors. Inflation will help a little when it comes but the end of food and grocery price deflation doesn't appear anywhere in sight, in our analysis.
But despite the increased competition in the Bay Area, where it's headquartered and where about 60% of its 200-plus Northern California supermarkets are located, Safeway Stores, Inc. remains the market share leader in the nine-county region, home to about 7 million people, by a long shot. And it's protecting its home turf by remodeling numerous stores in the region, along with building new ones. Modesto, California-based Save Mart Supermarkets' Lucky chain is the number two market share leader in the Bay Area, but Safeway holds the top position by a substantial number of share points.
On July 25 we wrote about Safeway's planned new flagship store in the East Bay Area city of Pleasanton, where the grocery chain has its corporate headquarters, which the grocer recently unveiled to various groups in the city. [See - July 25, 2010: Safeway to Start Construction on New Pleasanton, California Flagship Store Soon; Thanksgiving 2011 Target Opening]
Safeway on Shattuck in Berkeley: Night and day
On July 26, Safeway unveiled plans for yet another new supermarket - actually a stem-to-stern renovation and expansion of a smaller, existing store at Shattuck and Henry street, in the East Bay Area city of Berkeley, which is about 25 miles from Pleasanton. The renovation and expansion project is so extensive though, for all intents and purposes it's a "new" store.
Plans for the Shattuck Safeway in Berkeley call for turning the single-level supermarket into a two-level, 42, 492 neighborhood-oriented supermarket. The expansion adds about 15,000 square-feet to the current store's size. (Night and day: View the existing store here. Now view the plans for the expanded and renovated Shattuck Safeway store here.)
The store will be Safeway's latest version of its "Lifestyle" format, which includes expanded organic and specialty foods selections, an in-store Signature Cafe prepared foods center, expanded fresh produce and meat departments, an in-store bakery with a cafe, along with numerous other special features. (Before and after: You can view the various existing Shattuck store's departments here, along with what the same departments are planned to look like in the new store.)
The project's designer for Safeway is Oakland, California-based Lowney Architecture, which is currently working on two other major Safeway store renovations in the Bay Area.
The firm also is the designer of the 20,000 square-foot building in the Pedro Point shopping center in Pacifica, California, in which Tesco's Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market plans to open a store. Fresh & Easy is using about 14,000 square-feet in the building. The remaining space is currently being offered for sub-lease. The building has been completed for over a year. [See - July 21, 2010: Vacant Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market Store in Pacifica, California Has the City's Mayor in a Pickle]
Lowney Architecture, which is the design firm of record for all of Apple Computer's Apple retail stores nationally, also designed the "European Food Hall-Style" Whole Foods Market store in Oakland and is currently working on new Whole Foods stores in San Jose (60,000 square-feet) and in Dublin (55,000 square-feet), which is near Safeway's headquarters in Pleasanton. [See - May 9, 2010: A Whopping 15 of Whole Foods Market's 41 New Stores in Development are in Northern California and June 14, 2010: Newly-Named Whole Foods Market CO-CEO Walter Robb Comes Full Circle With the Opening of the New Store in Mill Valley CA]

Among the key design features of the planned expanded and revamped Safeway supermarket on Shattuck and Henry in Berkeley are:
>A new entry plaza and seating areas along Shattuck (depicted below)

>A renovated parkling garage with new on-site access ramp, featuring improved lighting, visibility and safety, as pictured below.
>New pedestrian access paths and bike parking
>Bay-friendly landscaping, bio-filtration of site water runoff, and an emphasis on native plant species for all landscaping.
>A 20-foot landscaped buffer at adjacent neighbor and improved landscaping along Henry Street.
Safeway Stores, Inc. and its architecture firm have have been working on the design for the store for a considerable amount of time. The first version, which was to demolish the Shattuck store and build a new supermarket from the ground up, was rejected by numerous neighborhood groups and individuals. Since then, Safeway and the designers have been working closely with neighborhood groups and residents in the planning of the store.
In fact, Safeway introduced the plans and design for the store on July 26 in a letter to residents of the Shattuck neighborhood. The letter is below (in italics):
July 26, 2010
Dear Berkeley Safeway Neighbors and Interested Parties:
Last December at a community meeting held at the Jewish Community Center, Safeway presented a new approach to improving this aging store. The proposal features a thorough remodel and addition of about 15,000 square feet instead of demolishing the store. (Safeway will keep the store open during construction to minimize shopper inconvenience.) In April of this year Safeway began meeting with the city’s Design Review Commission. The Commission’s suggestions, along with those of neighbors and other concerned residents, greatly improved the design and addressed important issues for Henry Street residents across the street from the store.
Today’s design is a vast improvement over the current store -- both inside and out. Great care was taken to bring the store out to Shattuck, enliven the corner with chairs and tables and attractive benches, provide vistas into the store by adding lots of glass, and modernize the exterior using concrete, composite wood, quartzite tile and glazed aluminum. We responded to many concerns brought to us by neighbors including retaining more trees, increasing bicycle and pedestrian safety, enclosing the loading dock, relocating mechanical equipment, and eliminating outside dumpsters and recycling.
The new design features a revamped parking lot with designated pedestrian paths shaded by a new canopy of trees. A ramp from the surface lot leads to underground parking which will be light and bright and have easy access to the store. The landscaping plan calls for saving most of the healthy mature trees, while adding thirty new trees, along with drought tolerant shrubs, bay friendly groundcovers, and climbing vines that cover walls facing Henry Street and deter graffiti. Native grasses and plants on the Henry Street side serve as a bioswale, filtering groundwater run-off before it empties into stormwater drains. The remodeled building will be far more energy efficient and is expected to be LEED compliant.
The next step for this proposal is a hearing before the Zoning Adjustment Board (ZAB) on August 12th at 7pm. The members of the ZAB will be trying to assess community support for improving this store. While we are very pleased to have the enthusiastic support of the North Shattuck Merchants Association, it is equally important that we demonstrate that Berkeley residents want Safeway to make this investment in their community to expand and improve the store. Safeway remains the only large grocer in California to employ union workers. The remodeled store will create about 35 new union jobs and re-invigorate the unique North Shattuck shopping area. In addition, the new store is expected to generate more than $200,000 annually to the City of Berkeley through increased sales and property taxes.
Sincerely,
Your Safeway Team!
As the last paragraph in the July 26 letter says, Safeway Stores, Inc. must still get approval for the renovation and expansion of the store from the City of Berkeley. That's no easy achievement in Berkeley, which along with being the home of the University of California's flagship campus and the city where the 1960's Free Speech Movement was born, is known for its citizen's participation in local land-use planning and politics.
For example, many neighborhood residents think the store will be to big and cause traffic congestion, even though Safeway did address those issues in its revamp of the plans and design. But then - it is the residents' neighborhood.
Other residents though like the design. The existing Safeway at Shattuck and Henry is small and older, as you can see in the link above. As such, many want a larger, modern and more upscale version like the one Safeway is proposing.
For Safeway, the new store will mean significantly increased sales, particularly of higher margin fresh, organic and specialty foods, which because the current store is smaller can't be merchandised to the extent the grocer would like to. The neighborhood is a particularly premium demographic - it's called the "Gourmet Ghetto" after all - for one of Safeway's newest version "Lifestyle" format supermarkets.
Odds are that Safeway will get the store approved with just a few minor changes. The grocer plans to start construction very soon after that approval comes, it says.
Below are the stories thus far in our '2010 Northern California Market Special Report' series:
July 25, 2010: Safeway to Start Construction on New Pleasanton, California Flagship Store Soon; Thanksgiving 2011 Target Opening
July 22, 2010: 'The Insider' - After Four Years in the High Weeds in Northern & Central California, Kroger Co. is Emerging to Grow its Foods Co Chain
July 21, 2010: Vacant Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market Store in Pacifica, California Has the City's Mayor in a Pickle
July 18, 2010: 'The Insider' - When it Comes to Northern California - its Competitors are Rome Burning and Tesco's Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market is Nero Playing the Fiddle
July 14, 2010: Tony Bennett Has Nothing on Whole Foods Market When it Comes to Loving San Francisco...That City By the Bay
July 6, 2010: Walmart Looking for Store Sites in Northern California For 20,000 Sq-Ft Neighborhood Market by Walmart Prototype Store
June 28, 2010: Smart & Final to Open its New Format SmartCo Foods Stores in California and Arizona
June 26, 2010: Tesco Planning to Announce in July When First Northern California Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market Stores to Open
June 14, 2010: Newly-Named Whole Foods Market CO-CEO Walter Robb Comes Full Circle With the Opening of the New Store in Mill Valley CA
June 5, 2010: Sprouts Farmers Market Opens First Northern California Store in Sunnyvale; Strikes Up Partnership With Local Non-Profit Farm
May 29, 2010: Going Rural: Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market to Build First Store in Los Banos, California
April 19, 2010: Tesco Debating Whether to Launch Fresh & Easy Into Northern California This Fiscal Year... or Wait
May 8, 2010: Sprouts, and Likely Henry's to Beat Fresh & Easy to Northern California Despite it's Big Head Start
May 6, 2010: Going Smaller & Getting 'Hybrid': Walmart's Smaller Supercenter in Vacant Retail Buildings Strategy Began in 2008
Additionally: Click here to read a selection of past stories on Tesco's Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market and Northern California. Click the "older posts" link at the bottom of the linked pages for additional posts on the topic.