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TOUR: ShopRite - Cedar Knolls, NJ

ShopRite of Greater Morristown
Owner: Robert Sumas / Village Super Market
Opened: 2013
Previous Tenants: none
Cooperative: Wakefern Food Corp.
Location: 178 E Hanover Ave, Cedar Knolls, Hanover, NJ
Photographed: July 2016
The 78,000 square foot flagship Village ShopRite finally comes to the blog five and a half years after I initially photographed it! And because these were early pictures on a long-ago iPhone, please excuse the picture quality; I'll have to go back to redo this tour at some point. Designed to counter the planned Wegmans nearby in Parsippany, this gigantic store replaced the much smaller and 1970s-era Morris Plains ShopRite in 2013. This was the first generation of Village Food Garden stores; Stirling and Livingston were the other two and Union opened at the same but was never branded with VFG.
This store's layout is fairly standard for Village but just rotated 90 degrees. The right side wall of the store is the front-end, so we enter to pharmacy/wellness center (the later Village Wellness Garden concept hadn't been developed yet at the time of this store) to the right, and customer service is straight ahead at the end of an island that forms the inside of the grand aisle. Produce, deli, and pizza line the front wall of the store, with bakery, floral, liquor, seafood, the Diner, and barbecue extending along the island behind customer service. In the front left corner of the store we have an indoor/outdoor seating area that is now home to a bar, Bin 37, and a coffee shop. From there, the store is a very familiar Village setup, with meat lining the side wall and frozen/dairy at the far back, and an aisle splitting the grocery aisles in half -- just like Elizabeth, Garwood, and so on.
Here's what we see upon entering -- the bakery department, seen here, is the beginning of an island that separates the grand aisle from the grocery aisles. The grocery aisles are behind this wall.
The Wellness Center is to the right upon entering, with pharmacy on the first floor and a second floor with a dietitian's office, a fitness studio, and a community room.
Now heading over for a closeup of the bakery...
I've discussed Village's variable bread placement before (moving it in many stores from bakery to deli in this era of remodels). I'm not sure if I have a good picture of it, but bread here gets its very own counter in the middle of the grand aisle.
Now turning 90 degrees to look out over the entire grand aisle...
Produce takes up the front corner of the grand aisle. Much like in the Village stores that are really deep but not wide (Elizabeth, Garwood), produce is wider but shallow, with other perishables behind it.
The interesting thing about this store is that it's much wider than it is deep, and the parking lot runs along the wall behind produce here, not the wall past the registers (which is the right-side wall here).
Floral and then liquor are opposite produce behind bakery, which is a somewhat unusual place to put them. I guess Elizabeth and Garwood used to have floral here, and this is the only Village ShopRite with liquor (...is that true?), so there's no standard placement for that.
We can see the aisle that divides the store in half between the liquor department and the oyster bar. Last I was at the store (which was years ago), the oyster bar had been eliminated and used as an expansion for the weirdly small seafood counter; the idea of serving things at a bar was relocated down to Bin 37 in the seating area.
By now, we've seen many of these signs in older and less deluxe stores that have been renovated, but this was the store for which this design package was designed.
And somewhere in the middle here is the island featuring cheese and bread...
Up next, the deli and pizzeria are on the front wall. Livingston also had a pizzeria, although it was removed a few years after being installed. Shame too, because the pizza was excellent.
Self-service food bars line the middle of this part of the grand aisle, which makes up the Village Food Garden.
The diner and Mr. Perry's Smokehouse, a reference to Perry Sumas (a past owner of Village Super Market) are next to seafood on the opposite side of the grand aisle, with another island for subs and sushi in the middle.
Fantastic signage in this area, which I believe was done by Broden Design Group. The newer Village stores are done by Off the Wall.
Looking back to the right side of the grand aisle, where the entrance is.
An overview of the sushi/sub island, along with the cafe registers on the front wall and the exit to the patio seating area straight ahead.
I don't have a picture of the seating area, unfortunately, but it's quite deluxe. Here's a picture from Village Super Market.
Butcher and packaged meats line the left side wall of the store.
The rest of the store is fairly normal for Village ShopRites, except for the middle aisle. In Elizabeth, it might be used for displaying big dump bins of sale merchandise, but here it's branded the Co-Op Market displaying a random selection of complete junk to high-end homegoods. Not a fan.
The right half of the first aisle, behind customer service/bakery/floral/liquor, is an additional aisle of liquor.
HABA also is in the first few aisles.
Not a whole lot you can do, of course, in the grocery aisles to continue the marketplace atmosphere of the grand aisle. But they are quite attractive, and the skylights allow a lot of natural light to come into the store which otherwise is light on windows.
But we do see the full Milk Store signage extending all the way to the ceiling here!
This sign, by the way, is not just a slogan or a name some design firm came up with -- it's the actual dairy farm that produces Wakefern's private label dairy and eggs, Readington Farms. That's down in Hunterdon County, and the closest ShopRite to the farm is the Branchburg location. There are two other supermarkets in Whitehouse/Readington, which we'll be touring when we get to Hunterdon County.
Frozen and dairy take up the last two aisles at the back of the store.
Bread is also back here, on the back wall of the store.
At the back end of the store we have the ShopRite from Home department, as well as an entrance and exit for the overflow parking on the side and back of the store. Note that there are only 10 aisles in total, but because of the setup, it's as much as 20 aisles in your average supermarket.
Here's the gigantic front-end from the front of the store, and you can also see the customer service counter opposite. Great old pictures of Village ShopRites take up a lot of space on the front wall...
Taking a look here, we have South Orange above register 17, Chatham (which still looks basically the same) between 16 and 15, Morristown above 15, and an unknown location above 14 (I don't recognize that one, does anyone else?). For some close-ups...
Chatham and Morristown. I have no idea what interior is shown on the bottom here, since the interiors have changed a lot more than the exteriors.
Not sure about this interior shot either. But how about that striped front wall! Also seems the first digit of the number has been removed -- accidental or not, isn't that a strange way to say it? Wouldn't you say "since 1937" instead of "for over XX years" so that you never have to update the sign? I mean, technically it's true that Village has been around for over 5 years, but I don't think that's what they were going for...
And here we see the exit at the front of the store. Well, that wraps up this very long store tour, but if you can't get enough supermarkets for the day, check out the recently-closed ACME to the west here, and the closed Foodtown to the east here. Tomorrow, we head east within Hanover Township for an independent store over on The Independent Edition!

Comments

  1. "...branded the Co-Op Market displaying a random selection of complete junk to high-end homegoods. Not a fan."

    Me either! My least favorite part of the store. Other than that, the place is absolutely amazing. Really love the juice bar. I've only been back a few times since I covered it for my blog in 2013. Easily my favorite ShopRite out there. Residents in this area are pretty lucky to have this ShopRite and a Wegmans close by for their food shopping!

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  2. Probably supposed to be 75 years (if this opened in 2013, and they were founded in 1937, that would be 75 or 76, depending on exact dates if they had hit 76 yet or not)?

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    1. I assume that's right, and I also assume that's why they took down the number. Still, I don't see why they would've installed a sign that so obviously had to be changed repeatedly.

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  3. I have a mixed opinion about this store. On the one hand, it has an amazing selection of prepared foods. I also love how there are pictures of old Village ShopRites on the front wall. On the other hand, a store this massive is not a place where I'd want to do my regular grocery shopping. As I said previously, I really don't like exposed ceilings as I think they are tacky and too visually distracting. (This view clearly puts me in the minority, as just about all new supermarkets have their ceilings exposed. I wonder why this look is so popular?) I'm not a fan of this store's exterior appearance, either.

    I do miss the small and outdated Morris Plains ShopRite (which I actually think was bigger than the Chatham location), and I'm grateful that Acme Style was able to photograph that store's interior before it closed. To be honest, Village might very well have been able to concurrently operate both the old Morris Plains ShopRite and the current ShopRite of Greater Morristown (while making a handsome profit on each store).

    Regarding the interior photo (above register # 13 of the ShopRite of Greater Morristown) showing the striped front wall right by the checkout counters of an old store, I can confirm that is a photo of the Chatham location! I know this because a photo of that section of the store appeared on Page 21 of the April 23, 1970 edition of the Madison-Florham Park Eagle.

    Also, take a look at the exterior photo of the Chatham ShopRite (located to the left of the sign for register # 15 at the ShopRite of Greater Morristown). I previously mentioned that the Chatham ShopRite was expanded circa 1987. (It acquired the space that was occupied by an adjacent store in the shopping center that closed.) Well, if you look at that photo, and you look at a streetside view of that shopping center that's available on Google Maps, you can ascertain where the supermarket's original entrance was located; everything to the right of that point was not part of the original Chatham ShopRite.

    I have no idea as to the location of the ShopRite above register # 14. ShopRite did have a location in Florham Park that is currently occupied by Kings, so it might be that store. (Note that the exterior of that shopping center was renovated when Kings opened; the metal roof that is currently there was not there when ShopRite operated its Florham Park store.)

    --A&P Fan

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    1. A&P Fan said "This view clearly puts me in the minority, as just about all new supermarkets have their ceilings exposed. I wonder why this look is so popular?"

      I think it's ultimately a money saving move. They can skip the cost of a drop ceiling and save money down the road when leaks happen and tiles get stained. Also allows for easier access for repairs.

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    2. That makes sense, Acme Style.

      By the way, I'm the same guy who posted as "Max" on your blog. (I also have left comments on Flickr, although I am known as "A&P Fan" there.) Once again, thanks so much for the many years of hard work that you put into your website.

      --A&P Fan

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    3. Oh ok, thanks Max/A&P Fan for letting me know! And you're welcome. Glad you enjoyed and participated in Acme Style. I do get tempted every now and then to start it back up but I'm not sure I can make the same commitment to it like I had the first time around. So for now I comment here a lot and do some posting of my local ACMEs over at....
      https://www.reddit.com/r/Acme_Markets/

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    4. Acme Style, your blog represented a major time commitment, so it's completely understandable that you decided to stop.

      Thank you for letting me know about the Acme Reddit, and also thank you for keeping the Acme Style website still available, since I still visit it.

      --A&P Fan

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  4. This was not designed to compete with the Wegmans. Wegmans opened 2017, 4 years after this location, Village sued the town in 2013 (The year Greater Morris Opened) because they had initially sought to build this location at the site of the Wegmans, and had their plans rejected.
    More details can be found here: nj.com/morris/2013/08/shoprite_company_sues_to_overturn_approval_for_wegmans_in_hanover.html
    Village ended up holding up the Wegmans ground breaking for 1 1/2-2 years with the lawsuit.

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    1. From my understanding, this was a preemptive strike -- Village knew Wegmans was trying to come into the area, knew they'd beat the outdated Morris Plains store, and simultaneously sued while preparing their own new store, to delay the opening of the Wegmans until after they could get their own store up and running. That's a pretty common tactic, to get your foot in the door first, which I believe is what Village was trying to do here.

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