Tag: Mid-City Mall

As Louisville’s grocery industry shifts, bare shelves at the Highlands ValuMarket aren’t as ominous as they appear

Empty shelves 1
5:15 p.m. Tuesday, ValuMarket in the Highlands.

By Jim Hopkins
Boulevard Publisher

Updated at 3:15 p.m.

The ValuMarket at Mid-City Mall on Bardstown Road is a Highlands mainstay and one of only three traditional supermarkets in one of the city’s most affluent, foodie-centric neighborhoods. So, it’s been unsettling to see the shelves looking increasingly bare in recent days, with more discount tags than usual.

But James Neumann, whose family owns the small chain, has just assured me the store is simply being reorganized to create more aisle space around the perimeter so it’s easier to navigate with shopping carts, a redesign coming to ValuMarket’s three other locations.

ValuMarket logoAt my suggestion, Neumann said he would ask the store to post signs telling customers what’s going on.

ValuMarket’s forlorn looks come less than two months after the Neumanns announced plans to shutter the Hurstbourne Plaza outlet on Hurstbourne Parkway at Shelbyville Road. The chain gave up the lease when the shopping center’s owners decided to redevelop the site without a grocery store, according to The Courier-Journal. The Neumanns also cited “tightening economics and a shift in local shopping habits.” The Hurstbourne store, there since 1982, had been on a year-to-year lease since the 2008 financial crisis.

Supermarket profit margins are notoriously razor-thin — 1.5%, according to the FMI trade group — and shifting competition only adds pressure. Costco is opening a mammoth warehouse store near the end of this month in the 3400 block of Bardstown Road just south of the Watterson Expressway. The $300 million Omni Hotel project downtown will include a grocery store when it opens in spring 2018. Developer Kevin Cogan is planning a huge hotel-apartment complex at Grinstead and Lexington roads, with 50,000 square feet of retail space; it’s still in the very early planning stage.

Fresh ThymeFresh Thyme is already planning a second location as an anchor tenant in the proposed Bardstown Pavilion center in Fern Creek, a project city planners are reviewing; the Chicago-based chain opened its first store last spring in St. Matthews on Shelbyville Road. On the other hand, the Kroger-occupied property in SoBro was recently put up for sale, raising questions about the store’s future. And it’s anyone’s guess whether Amazon Fresh grocery delivery will ever come to the area.

In the Highlands, ValuMarket’s other chief general merchandising competitors are two Krogers, one on Goss Avenue, the other on Bardstown Road near Taylorsville Road. To be sure, there’s a Rainbow Blossom natural foods store at Gardiner Lane Shopping Center. But you won’t find Tide detergent, Kellogg’s cornflakes, and other popular consumer basics there. And Rainbow’s prices are out of reach for many young and elderly shoppers on a budget.

Winn-Dixie store
Winn-Dixie soon after mall opened in early 1960s.

ValuMarket is at least the third supermarket at the nearly 60-year-old Mid-City Mall, which this year completed a $1 million renovation of the facade that took far longer than planned, hurting tenants during the all-important holiday shopping period.

It’s unclear when the Highlands store opened, although it appears to be around 2005. The previous tenant, Buehler’s Market, lasted a year after it replaced a Winn-Dixie that closed when that chain pulled out of the Louisville market in 2004, according to Wikipedia.

After the Hurstbourne store shuttered, ValuMarket was left with just four other locations: Mount Washington; Outer Loop Plaza; Iroquois Manor and the Highlands. A sister store, First Choice Market, serves West Louisville on Wilson Avenue in Park DuValle. ValuMarket employed 450 workers when the Hurstbourne store closing was announced; about a third of them were full-time. The Hurstbourne store employed 67, according to the CJ.

Mid-City tenants took a financial hit when the mall’s renovation dragged on after asbestos was discovered in the roof, delaying completion until past the holidays. “It’s been a disaster to my tenants,” majority owner Sandy Metts told Louisville Magazine in the June issue. Metts, whose family bought the Bardstown Road property in 1976, had to reduce rent, and plans for renovating the Baxter Street side were put on are hold.

Empty shelves 2
Employees say ValuMarket’s empty shelves are due to a store redesign underway.

Walmart’s $3B Jet buy hurting Amazon? (Wall Street says nope); a Humana DOJ loss could be Louisville’s gain; and Baxter Avenue Theatres plans big upgrades

A news summary focused on 10 big employers; updated 4:28 p.m.

Amazon vs. Walmart
Amazon’s stock (blue) rose and Walmart’s stock (red) fell today on the Jet deal.

AMAZON: Walmart’s $3 billion bet on discounter Jet may reinvigorate growth in its online shopping business, which has slowed in recent quarters even as Amazon’s overall sales have rocketed above $100 billion annually (CNN). Wall Street’s not holding its breath; Amazon’s stock rose a smidge and Walmart’s fell a bit by the time trading closed at 4 p.m. ET (Google Finance).

Jet logoEarlier today, news emerged that Amazon’s office has been searched by Japan’s Fair Trade Commission over its dealings with merchants who sell goods through the retailer, a person with knowledge of the matter told Bloomberg. The antitrust agency is looking into whether Amazon sought deals with sellers that gave it more favorable conditions over other e-commerce companies in one of its biggest foreign markets. It wasn’t immediately clear when the JFTC inquiry took place (Bloomberg).

The retailer’s shipping costs are skyrocketing, underscoring why it just unveiled its first branded Prime Air cargo plane. Amazon’s shipping expenses soared 43% vs. a year ago during the first half of the year. In 2013-2015, those costs were rising 29% to 32% annually. This year, it’s already on track to spend nearly $6 billion on shipping.

Amazon logo“Bottom line,” says ZD Net, “Amazon has no choice but to become more efficient than UPS and FedEx. If Amazon can use its own air fleet to even come close to its shipping vendors, it’ll potentially save billions of dollars simply by cutting out the middleman.”

Here’s a time-lapse video showing the new Prime Air Boeing 767 being readied for its debut this weekend at the annual Seafair air show in its corporate hometown of Seattle; more news coverage about Prime Air.

Amazon and UPS are both big employers in the Louisville area; UPS has 22,000 workers at its Louisville International Airport hub, and Amazon employs 6,000 at distribution centers in Jeffersonville and Shephardsville.

KINDRED has just filed its detailed quarterly 10-Q report with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The hospital and nursing giant reported strong earnings on Thursday (SEC document).

HUMANA could lose its Justice Department battle to win approval for the insurer’s proposed $37 billion merger with Aetna, but Louisville’s economy could wind up a winner — if the history of GE Appliances’ auction is a guide (WDRB).

In other news, the Baxter Avenue Theatres is adding powered reclining chairs and a full bar to the seven-screen Highlands complex at Mid-City Mall, an approximately $500,000 upgrade that will start in October (Insider Louisville).

KFC in U.K. fined $126K after failed health inspection; and Mid-City’s renovation delay was ‘a disaster to my tenants’

A news summary, focused on big employers; updated 8:42 a.m.

KFC: British authorities have fined the restaurant chain $126,000 after it pled guilty in Cwmbran Magistrates’ Court to three charges over hygiene issues at a Pontypool restaurant in Wales last year. An environmental health inspector found no hot water in the bathrooms or food preparation areas, meaning employees couldn’t properly wash their hands, and the premises and food equipment could not be cleaned. The problem stemmed from a boiler that had failed 10 days before the inspection. Janet Cox, head of health, safety and environment at KFC U.K. said the company accepted the findings, and noted that 97% of the 890 U.K. restaurants have a food hygiene score of four out of five or above (Wales Online).

Louisville Magazine June 2016In other news, Mid-City Mall’s $1 million renovation last year was slowed by the discovery of asbestos in the roof, delaying completion of the nearly 60-year-old Highlands institution past the critical Christmas shopping season. “It’s been a disaster to my tenants,” majority owner Sandy Metts told Louisville Magazine in the just-published June issue. Metts, whose family bought the Bardstown Road property in 1976, had to reduce rent, and plans for renovating the Baxter Street side are now on hold.

Metts had to please critics who weren’t happy with the design from the git-go. “This is lipstick on a very old pig,” Debra Richards Harlan told the Bardstown Road Overlay District during the planning stages last year, according to WDRB. This was the first renovation since the 1980s. The mall’s development started in 1959, and was built on the former site of the German Protestant Orphan’s Home; photo, below:

German Protestant Orphan's Home
The front entrance to the orphanage in 1927, in this photo from the University of Louisville Photographic Archives.

And finally, private-equity shop Blue Equity of Louisville bought 3 Kings Entertainment, a broadcasting talent agency in Washington representing more than 100 news anchors, reporters, sportscasters and other media personalities for an undisclosed amount. The deal comes as Blue Equity builds a new sports and entertainment platform (Sports Business Daily).