The QFC in Wallingford is undergoing a major remodeling, with nearly every element of the original Food Giant building now superseded by new construction. Except for a few brick walls here and there, this is not your father’s (or, probably, your) old store. Though the store is new, the massive neon “WALLINGFORD” sign, refashioned in 1996 mostly from old “FOOD GIANT” letters, has just returned to the store’s south side.
Watching the bones of the old Food Giant disappear got me thinking about how much the look and feel of the retail food business has changed in the 35 years or so that I’ve been paying attention.
In the boom times after World War II, a new architectural and cultural wonder began to appear in the American landscape: the supermarket. With massive footprints and tarmac-like parking lots, the supermarket brought the dry goods merchant, the grocer, the greengrocer and the butcher under one enormous roof.
Growing up in the 1970s on the Eastside, I was witness to the last glory years of the original American supermarket, as the hangar-like structures and grocery fixtures within began to tire and fade, and new and even bigger commercial developments with buffets and banks and eventually video rental departments began to displace their elders in the suburbs and exurbs.
I began to think of the dilapidated examples that did survive the 1970s as, affectionately, “rotten old supermarkets,” from a sincere fondness for their tenacity, for their long-serving staff and for the, literally, shopworn quality of the buildings, signage and wildly inefficient old Hussman freezer cases, Sweda mechanical cash registers, Hobart meat cutters, Chatillion produce scales and Reznor overhead heaters. It was a paradise of 20th century American-made know-how, a canvas upon which to depict the bounty of produce, frozen foods and canned goods so readily available in every community fortunate enough to attract a supermarket back in their salad (the kind you make at home — not the kind from a salad bar) days.
Rotten Old Supermarkets were all over the Eastside well into the 1980s, including the V&B in Redmond; Art’s on Rose Hill (which turned into a Tradewell for awhile, but nobody was fooled — they still had the old blue neon windmill Van de Kamp’s bakery sign on the side of the building); the Lucky in Juanita; and Grocery Boys near Crossroads. And Seattle had its great places, too: especially the old Shop Rites on Capitol Hill and First Hill; the Stone Way Safeway in Wallingford; and the Tradewell in West Seattle.
The Food Giant in Wallingford was Seattle’s flagship Rotten Old Supermarket — the Santa Maria of the fleet — until QFC’s take over just 13 years ago. They did a fairly extensive remodel then, but mostly within the confines of the original building. Those irritating QFC cards came soon after, and then the self-service checkout stations, clearly heralding sunset on the glory days of the American supermarket.
The new remodel project appears to be excising any and all reminders of the old store and that glorious Rotten Old Supermarket era, no matter what the neon letters may spell out up on the roof.
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Comments:
Posted Mon, Dec 28, 9:44 p.m. Inappropriate
I fix and maintain those inefficient Hussmann cases, Hobart meat cutters, and Reznor heaters for a large local grocery chain. I also remember the grocery store in Issaquah when I was a kid (mid-70's) that had the grease pencils for you to write the prices on the cans.
Check out the Lake City QFC, it's a time capsule. Literally every single effort that QFC has made to be upscale and relevant has passed this store by.
Posted Tue, Dec 29, 10:21 a.m. Inappropriate
I remember a time when QFC operated almost entirely out of King County, and all of their stores were "first generation" supermarkets abandoned by the big chains like Thriftway, Piggly Wiggly, Lucky and Food King. The QFC stores were, almost without exeption, frowzy. But they did have Bob Cram ("The Cartooning Weatherman") doing their TV commercials.
Posted Tue, Dec 29, 10:34 a.m. Inappropriate
There's still the Roosevelt QFC and the U-District Safeway, though I understand the former will come down to make way for the light-rail station. I'm not sure what's going on at the Safeway, but they've been doing some sort of work on the exterior.
And, of course, my childhood market, Bert's Red Apple (formerly Bert's IGA) in Madison Park. Not quite big enough to be a ROS, but still a blast from the past. Most of the people who were there when I was a 17-year-old bagboy are there to this day, 17 (!) years later.
Posted Tue, Dec 29, 1:39 p.m. Inappropriate
The one with grease pencils was Prairie Market, and the rumor was they were owned by Tradewell. There was one on 140th and 20th or so in Bellevue. It is now a Grocery Outlet I think.
Others that come to mind: Market Basket foods. There was one in Bellevue about where the Bellevue Hyatt Tower stands, and one in Eastgate that was turned into a warehouse.
Van's PX, later Lucky. There was one off of Lake Hills Blvd and 140th in Bellevue. The first QFC I recall was on Lake Hills Blvd and 156th.
Of course there were also six A & P... including BellSquare of old
Posted Tue, Dec 29, 3:20 p.m. Inappropriate
I think to a certain frame of mind a supermarket has to be new or it's no good. The A&P; in Bellevue Square was actually the most totally awesome, with the big coffeegrinders dominating the scene. All of the ones mentioned in Bellevue have opened and eventually seemed outmoded, although it seems obvious there couldn't really be that many new ideas and the products sold were brand names with no distinguishing characteristics.
I remember the first QFC near downtown Bellevue, probably about 106th and NE 10th, made a big deal of how high-quality everything would be, blah blah blah (they didn't have a hydroplane named for them) and really it was just different lighting.
I have no hesitation in recommending the Red Apple in Poulsbo to anyone who loves the older stores. You do have to look- it took me years to realize I was walking past frozen whole salmon at $2/pound- but they absolutely kill the competition on price and quality.
The big companies, though, like Safeway and Fred Meyer, are huge industrial complexes that can mold an unwary community to what the industrial machine likes. It is in some ways quite scary to realize that, in Mason County for example, these corporations have much more ability to describe, predict, and mold the county than our elected government.
Posted Tue, Dec 29, 4:38 p.m. Inappropriate
I was kind of mean to the early QFC there, so I should mention that one thing they did do was to build a smaller store and just sell groceries- no hamburger stand, no toy department, etc etc, and so the feel was different- you went there to buy food, not as a general sort of expedition.
At the time, that was different.
Posted Wed, Dec 30, 10:40 a.m. Inappropriate
The old Food Giant felt bigger than the QFC that is there now for some reason.
Posted Wed, Dec 30, 9:31 p.m. Inappropriate
I'm kind of mean to QFC now that it's been Kroger-ized.
Posted Wed, Dec 30, 10:36 p.m. Inappropriate
There still are a few of the ROS's left in the city. The original Metropolitan Market (aka QA Thriftway) atop QA, Ken's Market a little further up the hill, Marketime on Fremont Av., and the aforementioned Bert's Red Apple. The relocated Ken's on Greenwood Av is perhaps a Rotten New Supermarket.
The Seattle grocery market was once known for its strong local ownership but with the takeover of QFC/Fred Meyer by Kroger in the 90's the national chains and the introduction of the 24-hour "Hypermarkets" most of these smaller stores had to find a niche to survive or grow and try to compete with the chains. The recent demise of Larry's Markets shows the price of losing that gamble.
Posted Thu, Dec 31, 8:58 a.m. Inappropriate
I'd never heard of Kroger until merchandise with that name started replacing Western Family products in QFC stores. I guess Kroger is a big name on the East Coast; that doesn't impress me. I don't buy Kroger-brand products because as far as I'm concerned they have no track record for quality. Western Family products are still available at Metropolitan Market and the scattering of remaining Thriftway stores. I've been using their products all my life.
Now, don't get me started on Cragmont pop, that wretched Safeway swill. I understand it has a new name now. I'm not impressed by that, either.
Posted Thu, Dec 31, 12:52 p.m. Inappropriate
Thanks so much for reminding me of grocery stores past -- I grew up in Skyway and we shopped at the Market Basket for years, and then the Lucky's. I do miss the vibe at the older stores, but I have great fondness for the little, neighborhood markets that have been popping up, like Meridian Market over near Green Lake.
Posted Wed, Jan 6, 8:26 p.m. Inappropriate
Frank's Serv-u on Aurora ( I think there was another Frank's on Greenwood ); the small super on Roosevelt near 125th street - don't remember the name - the time being the early '60s. I haven't read here any mention of the wonderful smell of those old markets: as a child my spirits soared when the family entered one these hallowed stores and I could smell greens, kraft paper,tobacco smoke in the check-out line, candy near the cash registers, and at the A&P; at Northgate the exotic aroma of DIY fresh-ground coffee. Supermarkets now - with exception of Uwajimaya - have no stink of food, and in my opinion are inferior to their ancestors for this overabundance of sterility.