Sunday, May 10, 2020

Former Albertsons #4371 - Boca Raton, FL


Albertsons #4371
20409 State Route 7, Boca Raton, FL - Mission Bay Plaza

     While the former Publix Greenwise Market on the other side of town was a fun glimpse into Florida's recent supermarket history, we'll head off to the far western fringes of Boca Raton today to look at the city's former Albertsons store. Albertsons built their Boca Raton location just outside the city limits along US 441, a road typically referred to by locals as State Route 7 (which is the road's secondary designation). Albertsons was one of the anchor stores to the new shopping center called Mission Bay Plaza, the plaza named after the unincorporated community in which the plaza was built. With growth in western Palm Beach County surging in the late 1980's, the US 441/SR 7 corridor became the retail hub for Southern Palm Beach County. Along State Route 7 you'll find most of Boca Raton's "mainstream" retail - your Walmart, Target, Home Depot, Burlington, and the like. The actual city of Boca Raton, whose boundaries lie further to the east of here, has always been extremely picky about commercial development. With its "high class" appeal, the city of Boca Raton became more selective of what stores it wanted to approve within the town's actual boundaries, especially going into the 1980's. With that challenge to face, most retailers wanting to enter Boca Raton opted to locate outside the city's boundaries, making the wide open State Route 7 corridor a prime location for new retail development in the area.


     Mission Bay Plaza was one of the first major shopping centers to be built in West Boca, the plaza opening its first stores in late 1988. Alongside Albertsons, the other original anchor tenants to Mission Bay Plaza were a Toys R Us/Kids R Us combo store, Bizmart, and a General Cinema 8 screen theater. Since the plaza was named "Mission Bay Plaza", the developers decided to incorporate a Spanish Mission architectural theme throughout the complex, a theme that will become much more apparent later in this post.


     Albertsons opened this store with the rest of the plaza in November 1988. I don't know if this store was ever remodeled significantly in its lifetime, but I do know the exterior was never touched for the entire time Albertsons was in this building. Albertsons lasted in Boca Raton until February 2010, closing with the last few Albertsons stores that remained in Palm Beach County. This building didn't sit empty for long, as by early 2011, The Fresh Market had popped up in the right half of the building. Within a year of The Fresh Market's opening, Golfsmith popped up in the left half of the former Albertsons space. Both tenants completely stripped and gutted their halves of the building, going as far as to reconstruct the exteriors too. That's unfortunate, as this Albertsons had one of the nicest exteriors in Florida (pictures of which will come later in the post).


     While The Fresh Market seems to have some late 80's Albertsons-esque exterior design, their facade is completely new, designed to loosely match the other Spanish Mission architecture throughout the plaza.


     It's also a complete coincidence that I'll be featuring The Fresh Market on the blog today, continuing my unintentional theme of "2020: the year of the organic grocery store".


     Walking up to the building's front sidewalk, we find a shady seating area covered by a pergola. The seating area is located where Albertsons' right side vestibule would have once been located.


     Stepping away from the seating area, here's a look across the front of the old Albertsons. The Fresh Market's entrance is located by those garbage cans, so let's pop in there for a quick look around.


     Entering The Fresh Market, you walk into the produce department. The Fresh Market's space occupies the portion of the building that would have housed Albertsons' deli, bakery, and produce departments, which all would have been clustered along the store's right perimeter.


     One thing to note about The Fresh Market is their stores are very dark. My phone is very uncooperative when it comes to taking pictures in darker settings, so a lot of the pictures I took in here are either blurry or badly glared. However, the photo above seems to be one of the exceptions, as it appears to have turned out rather well!


     The Fresh Market's service departments are located in the back of the store, the deli and prepared foods located in an island just out of frame to my left. Meats were located in cases to my right, with the bakery just beyond that.


     Emerging from the bakery, we enter a small dry grocery section.


     The frozen food coolers line the left side wall, with the grocery aisles shooting off from here at an angle.


     Even though The Fresh Market has had some troubles recently, closing a number of locations throughout the country, they seem to hold their own in Florida. The Fresh Market caters more toward the Whole Foods shopper than the Lucky's shopper, presenting organics in a more formal, traditional, and higher-priced setting. For that reason The Fresh Market tends to put their stores in more well-off areas, and Boca Raton is certainly one of them.


     Here's a crummy picture looking toward the wine department, located in the front left corner of the store.


     My best picture of the entire store happened to be the last one I took - this one looking toward the front checklanes. I'm quite surprised at how clearly this one turned out, and how well the spotlighting cooperated with me! I guess my cheap 4-year-old phone can cooperate in the darkness when it feels like it!


     Exiting The Fresh Market, let's hed over to the left side of the former Albertsons building, home to the former Golfsmith space:


     With the Golfsmith chain's bankruptcy in 2016, the company closed the majority of its stores, including this location in Boca Raton. What stores Golfsmith didn't close during their 2016 bankruptcy were sold to Dick's Sporting Goods, who consolidated all the remaining Golfsmith stores into their Golf Galaxy brand. With Golfsmith's closure, the left half of the former Albertsons building sat vacant for about a year until Tuesday Morning and Five Below were brought in to fill the void. Even though Golfsmith preserved the shape of Albertsons' facade when they moved in, they still stripped away all of the old Albertsons elements from this side of the building too. Five Below and Tuesday Morning kept much of Golfsmith's design though, just relocating the doors and creating a new partition.


     Continuing with our stroll through the former Albertsons store, Tuesday Morning where we'll venture next...


     Considering that this side of the building has been gutted to the bare walls twice now since Albertsons left the building, finding any Albertsons relics in here was a bit of a lost cause. This photo looks down the very center of Tuesday Morning's salesfloor, the store's "grand aisle" I suppose.


     Tuesday Morning occupies the portion of the building that would have been home to Albertsons' frozen foods department, with the meat service counter in the back.


     The concrete floor in the Tuesday Morning part of the building was all scarred up. There's a chance those scars may have had to do with Albertsons refrigeration units (which would have been in this general area), or could just be a relic of the building's numerous conversions throughout the years.



     This final photo from within Tuesday Morning looks up the left side wall, the new partition installed to separate Tuesday Morning from its neighbor Five Below.


     And speaking of Five Below, let's go there next...


     Since Golfsmith preserved the shape of this side of the Albertsons building, we find a few vague Albertsons remnants as we enter Five Below. Probably the biggest hint left today that Albertsons once occupied this space is Five Below's odd entryway setup, with Five Below's entry located in Albertsons' old left side vestibule. The set of doors to my right is located where Albertsons' doors were once located, taking shoppers into the pharmacy side of the store. Five Below's checkouts take up the ramaining little sliver of vestibule, with the ramainder of the sales floor stretching back into the old pharmacy/health and beauty department.


     Back in the day, the sight in front of me would have looked more like this.


     According to the leasing plan for the shopping center, Five Below occupies the front two thirds of their sliver of the old Albertsons building. The back corner of the building Five Below does not occupy is being used as storage space.


     In a few places throughout Five Below's salesfloor, you could see the scars of some old floor tiles on the concrete floor. These tile scars were probably from Golfsmith though, as Albertsons' old tile pattern from the era this store was built would have been on an angle.



     I thought this was a neat little display.


     Heatlh and beauty products would have once lined this wall, with the pharmacy counter located straight ahead of me.


     Lastly from within Five Below, here's a look from the inside toward the old vestibule, with Five Below's checklanes taking up the space where you would have once entered the old Albertsons store.


     Leaving Five Below, the last place we need to visit is the old Albertsons liquor store, located just ahead of me beyond that brick column.


     Tucked away into the left side of the building, Albertsons' old liquor store has become home to a nail salon.


     While in many cases these old liquor stores are the only well-preserved glimpse into the main store's past, that wasn't the case here. Even the old Boca Raton Albertsons liquor store was gutted and rebuilt - including the facade.


     Looking away from the old liquor store, this glimpse down the plaza's front walkway showcases many of the Mission-style architectural elements included throughout the plaza - the Spanish clay tile, use of arches, old-timey lamps hanging from chains, and generous use of brick accents - all being examples of the Mission-style design.


     With that look at the old Albertsons space behind us, let's take a quick stroll through the rest of the plaza:


     Throughout the plaza were these handy directory posters. The former Albertsons is the large space at the top of the map, the other three anchors extending down along the property's western edge. Even with all the anchor changes here throughout the years, Mission Bay Plaza has held up well, maintaining a very high occupancy rate.


     The plaza also has these themed guide signs located throughout the conplex, listing all the tenants in a particular section of the plaza.


     We'll begin our short tour of the remainder of Mission Bay Plaza by leaving Albertsons and heading south. The first anchor we find is Dick's Sporting Goods, which occupies the former Toys R Us space. Toys R Us closed this location in January 2016 when their lease expired, the plaza's landlord already having Dick's lined up to fill the space upon Toys R Us's departure. Dick's heavily modified this space upon moving in, as here's what the place would have looked like originally as Toys R Us.


     We'll continue our walk with a few shots of the Mission style architecture found throughout the plaza's walkway.


     LA Fitness occupies the old General Cinemas space. General Cinemas was Mission Bay Plaza's first anchor casualty, with the theater closing in 2000. LA Fitness moved in shortly after that. In 2017, LA Fitness heavily remodeled this location, adding a new main entrance (the one pictured here, carved out of some smaller storefronts) and modernizing the interior. LA Fitness's original main entrance was located around the corner in the plaza's courtyard, and had a much more movie theater-like feel to it.



     At the south end of the complex is the plaza's courtyard, located to my right behind all those palm trees.


     The courtyard is a nice shady place to walk around or enjoy some outdoor dining. There were lots of trees in the courtyard, as well as a faux bell tower and (best of all) a fountain:


      It's not often you see a shopping center with a fountain, so this was a nice little touch. It was very tranquil in this part of the plaza, but I think a fountain can have that kind of effect on anything.


     The far southern end of Mission Bay Plaza contained the plaza's last anchor: OfficeMax. Originally home to Bizmart, OfficeMax opened here in 1993 following their purchase of the Bizmart chain, and lasted until May 2019, when this location was consolidated into a nearby Office Depot. Office Depot's corporate headquarters is actually located near here, as I drove by it on my way out of Boca. When Office Depot and OfficeMax merged, OfficeMax's longtime headquarters in Illinois was closed, with the newly merged company to operate fully out of Office Depot's Boca Raton headquarters. Since Office Depot is the hometown favorite, it makes sense that the town's OfficeMax was cut in favor of the nearby Office Depot. As of my visit, a pop-up Halloween store was operating out of the old OfficeMax space. The OfficeMax space is still empty as of the writing of this post, and according to the most recent leasing plan for Mission Bay Plaza, the empty OfficeMax is the only vacancy in the entire plaza. That's actually quite impressive for such a large center in this day and age!


     Now that we've finished our tour of Mission Bay Plaza, here's one final look back at the old Albertsons store before leaping into satellite imagery. First up, Bird's Eye aerial views, courtesy of Bing Maps:


Front


Right Side


Back


Left Side

     And now some historic aerial images, courtesy of Google Earth and historicaerials.com:


     To start, here's an aerial image of the entirety of Mission Bay Plaza, the Albertsons building located at the top of the image.


Former Albertsons #4371 - 2019


Former Albertsons #4371 - 2016


Former Albertsons #4371 - March 2011 - This is interesting, as here we can see The Fresh Market's conversion of their half of the building well underway. As you can see, The Fresh Market really stripped their half of the building down!


Former Albertsons #4371 - December 2010 - Going back three months from the previous image, renovation work is in its early stages here.


Albertsons #4371 - 2009


Albertsons #4371 - 1999 - This store really didn't change much at all during the time Albertsons was here.


Future Albertsons #4371 - 1980 - Just empty fields and pastureland out here back in 1980.


     To finish off this post, I'll share the few images I have of Albertsons #4371 back when the place was open. As you can see, this store had a really nice facade to tie it into the theme of the rest of the plaza, a change of pace compared to the plain stucco look of most 80's Superstore Albertsons. The front of the building had some decorative tilework, as well as some arbor like structures to dress the place up.


     While that last image was taken from way out in the parking lot, YonWooRetail2 decided to do a recreation of this store from a much closer angle, where we can better see how all the details tied into each other.

     Even though it's hard to find much of any evidence left from Albertsons' 22 year run in Boca Raton anymore, this store did serve the community well during the time it spent here. Mission Bay Plaza's landlord is also doing a good job at keeping the plaza tenanted and viable, which is also nice to see. With today's store of the past out of the way, next time we move into the stores of the future, with our much anticipated look at the new Greenwise Market coming to the blog. I know a lot of you are curious about those new prototypes, so be sure to come back in two weeks for that!

So until the next post,

The Albertsons Florida Blogger

11 comments:

  1. That Tuesday Morning looks kinda sad with the plain gray concrete floors. I was hoping they'd be stained. As it is, it makes the store look a lot more industrial than home-y.

    Also, I was briefly excited when I saw OfficeMax on that directory, but I should've known it was too good to be true XD

    Surprising to see the liquor store so thoroughly renovated as well!

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    1. I apologize if this got double-posted. I had an error when I went to post this the first time which was my fault. Oops. I'll re-write this again below.

      I'm not a frequent Tuesday Morning shopper, but I remember their stores being here in Houston way back to the 1980s even. In the handful of times I've been there over the years, their stores always seemed very basic, small, and quite unorganized to me. I did some research on Google Maps of their current stores in my area and it seems that Tuesday Morning has replaced their older locations with newer ones. Perhaps these newer ones are larger and more organized like the Boca Raton one described here. Most of the Tuesday Mornings around here have white vinyl tile floors, but those are locations in older shopping centers. The one newly built store in this area has a concrete floor.

      Hopefully AFB does not mind me going on a mild rant here, but I really do not like this concrete floor trend which has been commonplace for the last several years. It's fine for places like Home Depot, Sam's Club, and extreme discount stores (which probably describes Tuesday Morning), but those floors have no business being in mid-tier and above grocery stores and department stores. It's just my take that one should not feel like they are shopping in their garage when they go to a store with some level of prestige. I don't like our HEB stores in part because of that and many of our Kroger locations are getting concrete floors as well. In fact, we have a nice Greenhouse era Kroger near me which was renovated a couple years back and got one of those concrete floors. The floor is full of tile scar and also the concrete slab there was poured in the 1980s when the contractors probably thought nobody would ever see the concrete. Thus, it's quite patchy and has varying textures. It's ugly, IMO. Really ugly. Stained concrete looks a little better and I've noticed some new stores with concrete floors have this designer concrete look which almost looks like tile. That's not as bad looking as regular concrete. But, yeah, I get why retailers want shoppers to accept concrete floors. They are less maintenance and can last decades without needing replacement, but I just don't find them attractive in many applications.

      I also looked at that shopping center map and was intrigued by the OfficeMax location. I was thinking to myself that it was odd that Office Depot would keep an OfficeMax location in their backyard. Well, it turns out that the OfficeMax is indeed gone. We still do have a handful of OfficeMax locations here in Houston, but most OfficeMax locations here were located near Office Depot locations at the time of the merger and most/all of these redundant location problems were resolved by closing the OfficeMax locations. There are some Office Depots in Houston which were formerly OfficeMax locations, but those might have been converted even before the merger.

      I wonder if Office Depot might get more coverage on this blog or on the My Florida Retail blog in the future. When I think of Florida-based retailers with a strong presence here in Houston, not much comes to mind. There was Eckerd, which was loved by Houstonians, but they are long gone. The only other big retailer with a presence here that I can think of is Office Depot and they've been here in Houston for a long time. Office Depot and OfficeMax have been here much longer than Staples has and if recent Staples closures are any indication, Office Depot might be doing better here in Houston than Staples.

      It's interesting to see operating The Fresh Market stores. They quickly exited the Houston market after they purchased some Rice Epicurean supermarket locations a few years ago and converted them into The Fresh Markets. Perhaps the residents of Boca Raton are more interested in organic foods than Houstonians.

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  2. I remember the Mission Bay plaza quite well. Never went into the Albertsons, but I do remember that General Cinema theater. In fact I remember when the completely gutted it... they tore out the interior and cut out most of the roof, but left the outer walls intact. I remember hearing bulldozers and other equipment at work in the former theater.

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  3. The last Goodings store is sadly closing down

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    1. Really? Oh well, another lost Florida Retail...

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  4. Tuesday Morning is closing at Boca Raton as part of Tuesday Morning being bankrupt due to the coronavirus.

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  5. I don't recall the Kids R Us store ever being in this shopping center. I don't remember if the OfficeMax was an original tenant or not. There was a Kids R Us store diagonally across the street in the Westwinds of Boca shopping center. It closed with the other stores in 2004 and Petco has since taken it's place. It retained the original façade until it was renovated within the last year or two.

    As for the Albertsons store, I do remember the store had a remodeling back around 2000 or 2001. They had put in a Starbucks or some other coffee shop and a Ben & Jerry's or some other ice cream shop next to it as a small kiosk near the east end entrance. There may have also been a small seating area right next to it. Their shopping carts had been customized to include cup holders near the handlebar so customers could put their drinks in it. The kiosk didn't last very long. I believe it was closed only about 1-3 years later. The kiosk was later gutted and used to display sale goods for a while and then removed at a later time. I believe their shopping carts with the cup holders still remained until the store's closing.

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    1. Thanks for pointing that out about the Kids R Us. This is the article that mentioned Kids R Us was in Mission Bay Plaza originally: https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/132520740/ Digging a little further, the Kids R Us started out as a combo store with the Toys R Us in the plaza, before getting its own building across the street a few years later. The OfficeMax was originally a Bizmart, a chain OfficeMax bought out in 1993. The article about the plaza's opening made it seem like Kids R Us would be its own separate building, and has no mention of Bizmart, which tricked me into thinking OfficeMax was the old Kids R Us. I fixed the post to reflect this new information.

      Those Starbucks kiosks were a common trait in Albertsons remodels in the early 2000's, and like you mention, didn't last long. I remember the Starbucks kiosk at my local Albertsons suffering the same fate too, getting ripped out to be turned into a home for random sale merchandise.

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  6. "The actual city of Boca Raton, whose boundaries lie further to the east of here, has always been extremely picky about commercial development. With its "high class" appeal, the city of Boca Raton became more selective of what stores it wanted to approve within the town's actual boundaries, especially going into the 1980's. With that challenge to face, most retailers wanting to enter Boca Raton opted to locate outside the city's boundaries, making the wide open State Route 7 corridor a prime location for new retail development in the area."

    I believe it has more to do more with the limited availability of land in Palm Beach County in areas were development took off in the 1960s and 70s prior to large-scale commercial development, which is why you don't see many big box stores east of Florida's Turnpike, and especially east of Interstate 95... and if you do, usually it's in "power center" redevelopments of enclosed shopping malls, or subdivided space from another supermarket or junior department store of yesteryear. One exception in the City of Boca Raton is University Commons on the southeast corner of Glades Road and I-95, where a Nordstrom Rack (former Circuit City), Barnes and Noble, Bed Bath & Beyond, and Whole Foods Market (which expanded in 2007 to take up the space of a vacated Organized Living) are crammed into a wedge parcel like sardines in a can.

    The vacant OfficeMax was recently used as a Vineyard Vines "pop-up" clearance store and will be demolished and replaced with a medical office building, likely being that the shopping center is down the street from West Boca Medical Center.

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    1. That is true, finding large plots of land further east in Palm Beach County is difficult, which is why I'm surprised places like the old Winn-Dixie on Camino Real and the old Kmart on Palmetto Park Road have never been re-tenanted or redeveloped yet. You'd think someone would eagerly be wanting those buildings considering the locations east of I-95.

      University Commons does have an awkward set-up, and I can imagine that plaza gets busy considering FAU is right across the street, making that parking lot harder to navigate at peak times. Thanks for the update on the old OfficeMax too.

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  7. North Dixie Plaza has been under redevelopment in the past several years for "Camino Square," an apartment complex and smaller retail configuration with a mystery 22,399-square foot anchor. Could it be Aldi, Amazon Fresh, or Sprouts? Place your bets.
    https://properties.kimcorealty.com/p/commercial-real-estate-listings/Boca+Raton-FL-33432/101010

    Since Kmart closed at Palmetto Park Square in 2019, rumors are uncommon that Publix will buy it (or the entire shopping center frankly) to tear down for another monster store, considering their existing location in the shopping center, dating from the 1990s is a pretty cramped and somewhat unusual store, which was a demolition and new construction replacing an existing Grand Union, Pantry Pride, and/or Woolley's in what appears when looking at historic imagery is a smaller footprint.

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