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Comments
Submitted by Andrew (not verified) on Tue, 11/6/2007 - 2:34am
Looks like Galaxy has been converted to a Compare Foods grocery. New sign went up on the marquee a couple days ago.
Submitted by John Martin (not verified) on Tue, 11/6/2007 - 3:34am
Whole Foods on Broad Street was originally an A&P. Before Whole Foods moved to Broad Street, it was the Wellspring, and it's original location was on 9th Street where the Magnolia Grill is now. That building was orginally a neighborhood grocery, Scarborough's Grocery. (I may have the name or spelling slightly askew.)
There was a Colonial Store (I think) on Broad Street where Watts Grocery (which is of course a restaurant, not a grocery) is now. There was also a Colonial Store at Northgate when Northgate was just a strip shopping center.
Now it is decreed that all grocery stores have to be the size of St. Peter's Basilica, so obviously these buildings are way too small.
Submitted by Gary (not verified) on Tue, 11/6/2007 - 3:41am
So the Whole Foods building was always an A&P? I knew it was an A&P before it was Sav-A-Center, but I have an old picture of a strip that looks much like the one on Broad St. with a Colonial Stores. Something seems not-quite-right about that picture for Broad St., though, so this makes sense. I'll correct the post above.
I also have one of the (you are correct) Colonial Stores at the current Watts Grocery location (grand opening picture)
Submitted by Joe (not verified) on Tue, 11/6/2007 - 6:33am
I know this is off point, but Wellspring went through the current George's Garage space before moving to the A&P/SupRFreshSavACenter (or whatever it was). I doubt that complex at the SW corner of Markham/9th/Hillsborough Rd. would have been built had Wellspring not wanted to move. (The other tenants were the defunct Kerr Drug and another small store or two, one of which was something like an REI).
I can't speak for the Broad Street A&P before 1980 or so.
Submitted by John Martin (not verified) on Tue, 11/6/2007 - 1:14pm
I can't say for sure that the Broad Street building was "always" an A&P. But it was an A&P in 1967 when I came to Durham. I don't know when it was built, but judging by the design, it looks like a 1950's era building. It's conceivable that it was a Colonial Store first. But, aside from the other one on Broad Street, there was also a Colonial Store on Main Street near Great Jones Street in the 1960's. That seems like quite a concentration of Colonial Stores very close to each other.
I had forgotten about "Sav-a-Center." That was also owned by A&P when they had the brilliant idea that people who wouldn't shop at A&P might shop at same store run by the same company but called something else. Go figure. People I knew still continued to call it the A&P
Submitted by Michael Bacon (not verified) on Tue, 11/6/2007 - 4:49pm
I'm pretty sure that at least for a short while, the Broad St. location was an IGA. I'm pretty sure that's what it was when I was at NCSSM, 92-94.
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 11/7/2007 - 2:15am
John is correct, A&P renamed certain stores Sav-A-Center. Southern stores that didn't meet A&P's attempts for a new bigger modern image in the mid 80's were renamed Sav-A-Center. Eventually all Sav-A-Centers in the South were closed. To my knowledge the only A&P's that still exist in the South are in Louisiana.
AMS
Submitted by d-roll (not verified) on Wed, 11/7/2007 - 8:10pm
Compare is pretty good, but Los Primos is the bomb -- currently the best place to buy Salvadoran sausages (they have four varieties).
Submitted by Barry Ragin (not verified) on Thu, 11/8/2007 - 1:09pm
my recollection of the new Compare in Forest Hills is that it was a Lowe's Foods before it was a Galaxy, and a Byrd's before that. i don't recall it being a Kroger, but i've only been here since 93.
Submitted by Gary (not verified) on Thu, 11/8/2007 - 1:59pm
I do also have a picture of the Colonial Stores at Five Points; I have a whole series of supermarket photographs from the 1950s. Some I still haven't identified - but at least a few of them are in Chapel Hill, which led to some of my bafflement (presuming they were all of Durham initially.)
Barry, I agree with your timeline for the stores at Forest Hills - it was a Kroger when it was first built in the 1950s (one strip shopping center that I could definitively identify.)
Gary
Submitted by Barry Ragin (not verified) on Fri, 11/9/2007 - 3:14pm
thanks Gary. good news about the Alston Ave. widening project as well. i hope to get something up on that at my place in the next week or so, but the gist that i got at the EEC ad hoc meeting the other night is that the city and the community were able to prevail upon NCDOT that their plan did not make sense for the community.
looking at the the numbers, it's clear that Alston is already carrying more traffic than it can handle, and something will need to be done. But running a 5 lane thoroughfare through the heart of a residential community is not the best option.
Submitted by Gary (not verified) on Fri, 11/9/2007 - 5:42pm
Barry
Agreed on Alston - as I've said before, I wasn't inherently opposed to widening Alston Avenue - it was the roadway design that stunk. Part of the problem here is that the one-size-fits-all mentality of NCDOT can mean a project is take-it-or-leave-it. In this case, I wish there had been (will be?) more of an opportunity to get a great boulevard rather than the nasty infrastructure there is now or the highway that DOT designed.
I hope that somehow we can move the mountain of DOT - to walk-the-walk (literally) of community context rather than checking the community involvement boxes and designing the same ol' roadways anyway.
GK
Submitted by Barry Ragin (not verified) on Fri, 11/9/2007 - 8:48pm
i mentioned to one of the engineers that unbroken center left turn lanes were essentially pedestrian death traps, and that landscaped medians make much more sense.
she agreed, but claimed that residents along the road preferred to have left turn access in and out of every one of their driveways. if that is really true, this is one case where the engineers need to prevail.
Submitted by E.D.Visitor (not verified) on Sun, 11/11/2007 - 2:22am
i mentioned to one of the engineers that unbroken center left turn lanes were essentially pedestrian death traps, and that landscaped medians make much more sense.
This is my drive every single day. I know what the residents are saying. However, the idea of landscaped center medians sounds like a great compromise to the widening and the center left turn lanes. They definitely offer great opportunity for city beautification and, still, if people need to turn left into a driveway, with the center median, a left hand turn section can be placed at the end of each stretch of road that has a signal to allow u-turns. This providing that u-turns could be accomplished on the narrow streets.
Submitted by girlnblack77 (not verified) on Tue, 5/26/2009 - 9:59am
Aha! This one, at E. Main, (now Los Primos) is the one I found the UCC filing for as a Piggly Wiggly in 1982/1983...
Submitted by Professor Mom (not verified) on Mon, 9/19/2011 - 2:00am
Does anyone know about when the mural was painted on the side of Los Primos or who the artist might be?
Submitted by george hawkins (not verified) on Sun, 7/6/2014 - 4:04pm
I did the electrical wiring of this building when it was new. I was working for Barton Electrical Construction Co.
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