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Showing posts with label ross. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ross. Show all posts

Sunday, September 18, 2022

The NARDI Construction Archives: Shoppers Edition

Welcome back once again to the Shoppes of Battery Mill, where blogging is a pleasure (or something like that!)

This blog post is part of a discovery I've had in my hands for quite some time, part of two portfolio PDFs from NARDI Construction.

Now what is this, you may ask? NARDI Construction is a firm based out of Beltsville, Maryland. The organization has attached their name to dozens of building projects in the Washington, D.C. area and beyond, making a mark in the local retail scene alongside. While NARDI has been known primarily for constructing shopping centers and malls, they also maintained a working relationship with supermarket chain Shoppers Food Warehouse in the 1990s. This is what I will be focusing on for this post, though I do plan on exploring the rest of their archives down the line.

With that being said, let's get it started! I will showcase a few exteriors of Shoppers stores worked on by NARDI, in store opening order before we dive in to the rest.

Exterior photos

The collection begins with the Takoma Park, Maryland Shoppers (store #19/2340). While this location dates back to the Jumbo Food days (pre-1980), it was expanded and remodeled in its years under the Shoppers name, most notably to the Shoppers Club moniker in the mid-1990s. This location closed in the late 2019 wave and was sold to German discounter Lidl along with several others. I do quite like the orange bevel accent at the end of the facade here.


Next, here is the Woodbridge, Virginia location (store #45/2361), which opened as a Shoppers Club in early 1994. I covered this location in 2016, prior to closing, and today it stands as a Hobby Lobby which has gutted traces of Shoppers like the Takoma Park Lidl has. To the right is a Trak Auto (now Advance Auto Parts), and in the front is an empty pad site (now a Mission BBQ).

In my personal opinion, I have a soft spot for this facade - it matched the aesthetic of the nearby Potomac Mills mall and conveys a rather industrial quality. It was unfortunately replaced with a generic facade in a remodel.

Rounding out exterior photos, we travel to the Cloppers Mill center in Germantown, Maryland (store #46/2358). This center was profiled by NARDI as breaking ground in early November 1994 and finishing in September 1995. Of the three, it is still operating as Shoppers in 2022 and is notably the only Shoppers build to feature open-truss ceilings.

To the left is a standalone Chevy Chase Bank. Not so long ago they were a major fixture in Washington, D.C.-area shopping centers, heralded by a Benjamin Franklin lookalike inviting customers over to "The Leading Local Bank". Then everything changed when the CapitalOne nation swooped in, with these buildings now disappearing due to a shift to online banking. The site is now home to a Dunkin' Donuts in place. It's unfortunate for those fancy Federalist designs - where would one be able to ask for dollars when everything's now digital?

In the words of Steve Jobs, one more thing: this close-up of the facade. This one may have been taken a few years into the center's existence, as storefront advertising has changed slightly from the plain red and white posters featured earlier on.

Before I begin these interior photos, I would like to note that they are from several different locations, none of which have been specified (although NARDI has listed several Shoppers which they worked on).

Now it's time. Let's enter through the automatic doors and travel back into Shoppers' heyday, once again.

Interior photos

 

Our savings start here, and so does this store tour! We get introduced to the inside via the pleasant aromas and sights that behold us in the floral department, clad in reflective slatted walls, swooping accents, neon, and grid lighting. While Shoppers had long invested in fresh flowers, the Shoppers Club concept expanded the selection greatly, defining the chain for years to come.

In the background, we have a partial view into the Shoppers Café dining area and a "Restrooms" sign. This layout configuration would carry over into Shoppers stores built in the 2000s.


Turning to the left, we have prepared foods counters and shelves at a glance. This was another defining feature of Shoppers Clubs which I first touched on in my overview of the College Park site. This time, however, we get a closer look at the deli and hot foods portion, with soda/coffee fountains taking center stage. I must say, SFW was quite ahead of its time here!

Here is a closeup of the "Hot to Go" counter, displaying a buffet of warm delicacies. At the left of the photo, Shoppers touts its paninis for only $2.98 - a deal, I must reckon!

This is likely from a different location than the photo above, seeing as sunlight from the café windows is present to the right. Though bear with me, I may be wrong.

Just across the actionway is another Shoppers layout standby, the corner produce department. This happens to be a shot similar to that of College Park's produce, though it appears to be slightly smaller and with fluorescent as opposed to mercury vapor lighting eminating from the ceiling.

Before we check out, let's hop back over to the prepared foods side of things, of stuff, and of sorts combined. We are adjacent to Shoppers' expansive cheese, deli meat and edge produce selections, though we can also see further into the store in greater detail. In case you forgot this was "Shoppers Club", you can go get a Club Pak of steak before rounding the corner into the rest of the supermarket.

While we have seen our fair share of neon accents, the bakery and seafood departments are where Shoppers' neon delight continues to unravel. I just hope somebody got ahold of that wavy fixture next to "Fresh Fish"!

We close out this tour at no other place than the checkouts. In this photo from November 1996, we see a good glimpse into the aisle markers, express lane signage, Shoppers instruction manual, and tabloids too.

As opposed to being from Shoppers Clubs, this happens to be a photo of a standard late 1980s-early 1990s purpose-built Shoppers warehouse. This design is smaller than what came after, and features a distinct alcove going across the front end. This photo also marks first time I've seen orange warehouse racks in this era of SFW, interestingly.

Before we head off, let's go over some of the steps we need to take to save at Shoppers:

  1.  ?
  2.  ?
  3. "U Pack Your Order"
  4. "U Load Your Car"
  5. "U Do a Little, U Save a Lot"

As you can see I can't quite get a glimpse of the first two directions, but I think it's suitable at this point of our grocery trip. If anyone could help find the rest of them to better our Shoppers store trips, it would be great. All constructive comments are appreciated, as always. Just before we get home, though...

Bonus Photos

Here is a look at the former South Valley shopping center in the Hybla Valley neighborhood of Alexandria, Virginia, also a NARDI project. I chose to feature this center primarily as, upon its reconstruction, it was unified with the Mt. Vernon Plaza to the north which indeed features a Shoppers.

 

The center was comprised of two stories of retail and also once featured Kmart (store #3712), which closed in 2000. Upon Kmart vacating the space, the center was abandoned and demolished for Home Depot which currently stands.

Anyhow, thanks for reading as always!

-BatteryMill

Thursday, February 13, 2020

Retail Mix, Volume 1

Welcome back to the Shoppes of BatteryMill! Today's post will be a quickie, though not necessarily with content! I present to you the first Retail Mix photo compilation series, focusing on a wide array of individual pictures I felt couldn't really fit with their own categories.

This inaugural edition of the Retail Mix will focus on various photos I took over the summer from various retail destinations around Northern Virginia. These range from rather common retail sights to some oddities, of which we have several in both categories. Without further ado, enjoy!

Photos taken from June 10, 2019 to August 14, 2019
We start this photoset with a (somewhat) retro retail gem - CRT TVs at the Potomac Mills Rainbow store (a former 5-7-9). Playing a variety of music videos, these TVs match the somewhat classic store look - and still sport the chain's old brand logo through their programming. On a related note, Rainbow also has a location in the Smoketown Stations center outside the mall.
We tab over to the Nike store, where we see a rather interesting AC system. How tubular!
Jumping on over to PWC's other enclosed mall, Manassas has a rather peculiar old storefront near Sears. While this has been uncovered after several years, it only briefly hosted a tenant.
A Project Impact era without text - what could this mean possibly? (spoiler: the opposite side marks "Dairy")
Just another perimeter grocery area at Walmart. The aisle markers were updated in 2018 to include the mobile identification system. I find it a little garish, but I guess they should advance to the mobile age.
Here are background signs in the Walmart grocery area. The yellow grocery walls were repainted in early 2018.
Something rather interesting in the retail sphere - a recently closed Five Guys restaurant (which relocated to a site near the Manassas Mall).  On top of that, it was once a CVS/Pharmacy that relocated across Sudley Road to a standalone spot in 1999. This is interesting considering a Walgreens currently operates on the other side of this shopping center.
A small, yet mighty store location marker at Bull Run Plaza. Its color scheme and design is reflective of local history.
The ingress/egress street from the Bull Run Plaza shopping center in Manassas, lined with dense shrubs and colorful trees. Also pictured is part of the shopping center with a California Tortilla restaurant and a tower listing three tenants (Michaels, Petsmart, and the now closed Shoppers location.
Changes are afoot at Walmart. The majority of overhead signage, from the windows to the walls, has been taken down for what has become a remodel with a long rollout. Through the next few months, new LED lighting would be installed and a new pickup center would be constructed outside the store. Into 2020, the store would begin an official, wide-scale remodel. Photos of the remodel will be uploaded soon to this blog, so stay tuned!
Seeing double at Ross? This unusual retail find occured last year as the chain swapped locations after only three years in business. Ross replaced a former CWPrice/Fallas location in its new spot while the old Ross became a DD's Discounts soon after. The former Ross location was part of a long-closed Shoppers Food store.
 The golden entrance to Ikea... walk this way for DIY furniture and visionary showrooms!
What's a blog post without something out of the ordinary? This Costco price tag made its way to no other place than an Ikea parking garage. Talk about that...
West Elm is one of Mosaic District's trendy clothing tenants, selling higher-fashion products emblematic to the center.
Barnes & Noble is still opening new stores such as this one, which opened this past April. It is rather smaller and dedicated more towards younger shoppers, however it still happens to feature lots of items with a regular lineup of products.
A now-former Z Gallerie stands at the Mosaic Center across from the Target parking garage entrance. This store, among 17 other locations of this luxury home decor store closed after a bankruptcy filing and acquisition by DirectBuy.
Closing out today's photoset, we observe how the old low-rise Merrifield meets the new medium-rise development - a sign of the times in this edge city. The first photo features a shopping center anchored by HMart and Office Depot, and a standalone TitleMax auto loans shop appears surrounded by the Mosaic District.

-

More editions are to come, featuring more of what I've taken for y'all. 'Till then, have fun!