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Supermarket companies and stores located in New Zealand. Pages in category "Supermarkets of New Zealand" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total. ...
Name Retail format Main products Number of stores Number of Auckland stores Parent company Founded Head office 2degrees: Electronics store [1]: Mobile phones [1]: 56 [1]: 20 [1] ...
Night 'n Day is a chain of New Zealand grocery stores. The stores operate long hours, and sell a range of ready-to-eat products. [1] Night 'n Day is the third largest grocery retailer in New Zealand. [2] Since 2011, it has rapidly expanded its network of stores and focused more on coffee and takeaway food. [2]
Hess – based in New York City; sold its gas station/convenience store network to Marathon Petroleum in 2014; Jacksons Stores – became Sainsbury's at Jacksons in 2004; replaced with the Sainsbury's Local brand in 2008; Local Plus – based in the UK, bought by the Co-operative Group in 2004
There is a total of 148 New World supermarkets across the North and South Islands of New Zealand (as of July 2023). [18] New World stores tend to be smaller (2,500–3,000 square metres (27,000–32,000 sq ft)) and more upscale than their competitors. Prices tend to be higher in most stores, due to the cost of upscale presentation, large ...
A bodega cat in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, New York City A bodega cat in Hudson Square, Manhattan, New York City A young bodega cat performing a routine inspection for mice.. A bodega cat (also referred to as a deli cat, store cat, shop cat, the manager or the boss) is a type of working cat that inhabits a bodega, which in New York City English refers to a convenience store or deli.
A convenience store may also be called a cold store, party store (), bodega (New York City), carry out, mini-market, mini-mart, corner shop, deli or milk bar (Australia), dairy (New Zealand), superette (New Zealand, parts of Canada, and in parts of the US), corner store (many parts of English-speaking Canada and New England), a späti (from 'spätkauf' (lit. 'buy-late') in Germany, a konbini ...
The first Four Square, the first supermarket in New Zealand, opened in the 1920s. [3]Four Square emerged as a household name in the 1920s out of the Foodstuffs grocery buying co-operative, whose founder, John Heaton Barker, became concerned at the manner in which the activities of the grocery chain stores of the day were making life difficult for independent grocers in Auckland.