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TOUR: ShopRite - Livingston, NJ

This week's second tour will be one that we saw previously on Flickr before the account was removed.
For a little history here, this is a 1960s-era store, although it has been renovated and expanded many times. The latest expansion probably came in the mid 1990s, when the store was likely renovated to the decor package we saw in Elizabeth, NJ. (The two stores share an owner, Village Super Market, which also owns West Orange, Garwood...and about 25 others!) Additional renovations came ca. 2005, bringing it up to date with the decor seen in West Orange and Garwood, the most attractive Village decor package in my opinion -- and the most iconically Village. When the nearby Kings Food Market renovated in 2012 and expanded their grand aisle, this ShopRite was redone once again, although leaving most of the decor intact. A Village Food Garden featuring a pizzeria, sushi bar, sandwich bar, fried chicken station, and diner counter were installed, as well as a remodeled café. Only the decor in the grand aisle was really redone, unfortunately, leaving it with a strange disconnect with the rest of the store. Minor renovations in 2017-18 more recently installed new decor storewide, and reconfigured the Village Food Garden, making it far more spacious but removing a few services.

The outdated exterior design was replaced in 2017, first installing a new logo on the facade and then repainting the awning.
I think the black paint across the whole awning is by far the best design they've used in this location yet, although I do think the green awning could have worked fine. Unfortunately, we're kind of still seeing the green paint job.
Immediately after the awning was painted, the outside looked great. However, it soon fell apart...
Within a few months, the black paint had already started to peel. Not sure whether it's been fixed yet. Anyway, let's head inside. The grand aisle is quite impressive and consists of a large produce department with the Village Food Garden along the left side wall, and this is where most of the changes have taken place.
BEFORE
AFTER
Note the replacement of all of the produce cases with new, sleek black cases as opposed to the dump bins and older cases; this is a big improvement in my opinion! The Livingston Farms sign, which is beautiful (if a little wrinkly around the corners), is an enormous banner hanging from the ceiling that distinctly separates the grand aisle from the rest of the store, which is on the other side. Heading over to bakery...
BEFORE
Bread counter, formerly in the bakery department. (It's now in deli.)
AFTER
Where the bread counter used to be has been replaced by a self-service bread shelf. Fancy breads are now in deli. Just next to bakery is prepared foods and the café.
BEFORE
Cluttered prepared foods area with a seating area behind the display to the left.
Prepared foods next to the pizza counter.
Diner counter. Both of these counters have been removed.
AFTER
Spacious prepared foods area now! Also, the floor is really nice.
Café is now open to the rest of the store with only a low case in front of it! The hanging lights are over the tables.
Sub and salad counter has moved to the former diner space, with other prepared foods taking its former space.
Beautiful fixtures to display all of the prepared foods.
The prepared foods here are a big draw; although they are not cheap, they are very good and the selection is huge! Now over to deli, in the back corner...
BEFORE
AFTER
New cases featuring an expanded selection of cheeses at the deli. The cases also display store-baked breads on top.
Additional cheese cases with more great signage printed on huge banners are just in front of the deli, which you can see to the far right in the above photo.
BEFORE
 Seafood is next to the deli counter.
Butcher is the next stop along the perimeter...
This decor, which I like a lot, is left over from the mid-2000s remodel. I have to imagine the service butcher was originally on the angle here, but a small butcher counter is now located just around the corner.
AFTER
Totally new, matching signage, finally! New signage also lines the back wall of the store as well. Now let's finish our circuit of the store with all "before" pictures...
Once you get out of the grand aisle, the store isn't honestly all that exciting.
Milk, juice, and eggs in the back corner.
Dairy lines the last aisle.
There are two frozen aisles. The cases to the left used to be coffin cases, which is why they don't match the silver ones on the right.
Pharmacy and a Kosher counter are in the front corner opposite the entrance.
BEFORE
Again, older department signage here. Although I still like this decor, I do wish they'd used the same font for "Kosher" as they did for all the other departments.
AFTER
Simple and attractive, if a little cheap looking! Floral is immediately next to the Kosher counter.
BEFORE
Extensive floral department with a nice structure over it, the perfect place to hang the Village Market Horticulture sign we saw in Garwood. Except there isn't one. In fact, there was no decor whatsoever at the floral department. Quite strange. But that has changed...
AFTER
How can you not love a decor package that incorporates an entire bicycle? Now for a quick look at the front-end before we head out...
BEFORE
The floor has been refinished, although it still has not been replaced (three renovations after what it was intended for?).
AFTER
There's also much less clutter, and the virtually-new aisle markers have been replaced. I can only hope that the old aisle markers went to an older Village that hasn't been renovated.

We see some really nice changes at the Livingston ShopRite (483 S Livingston Ave), bringing it for the first time in many years to a single, coherent decor package. I'm quite impressed also with their ability to reduce clutter overall significantly. But why does Village still refuse to renovate their stores in Millburn, Elizabeth, and East Orange?


ShopRite

483 S Livingston Ave, Livingston, NJ
Open Daily 6:30AM-11PM
http://www.shoprite.com
(973) 740-2004
My Rating: 

Comments

  1. You'd think by now painters would have realized that painting those awnings doesn't work.

    We had an Albany Public here (which was originally a blue/green color) that was bought by Grand Union (not sure if they painted it since it wasn't open that long) then became Big Al's (bright red), followed by Fays Drugs (dark brown), then Eckerd (Dark Blue) before sitting vacant for a few years after Rite Aid bought them out (now it's a Planet Fitness, and they redid the whole front to their look so the awning is no longer there).

    All that time, every time the paint would peel or chip off, you'd always see the blue/green color, never any of the others, even after there were 4 layers on top of it (I think Fays was longest and they painted it brown a couple times)!

    Same happens with the roof tiles from Howard Johnson - no matter what color they try, there is almost always orange peeking out!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Wow! It's strange that these materials are so hard to paint, you'd think that that would be a main consideration in creating an awning or storefront.

      Delete

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