Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Real Canadian Superstore Lansdowne Place. The 1980s saw further innovation with regard to store formats. In Western Canada, Westfair Foods, a Loblaw subsidiary, unveiled its first "superstore" in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, in 1979. Opened under the SuperValu banner, it was later renamed the Real Canadian Superstore.
Super Centre was a hyper supermarket banner used by Loblaws during the 1990s in Ontario. Some stores were an expansion from the Super-Valu banner. These stores were about 60,000 to 120,000 square feet (5,600–11,100 m 2) in size on average, larger than standard supermarkets, sold a wider selection of merchandise (including department store merchandise, such as clothing), and contained in ...
Real Canadian Superstore exterior in 2020. The first Real Canadian Superstore location opened in March 1979 in a former Loblaws location in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan under the name SuperValu. Numerous other SuperValu locations opened across Western Canada before most gradually expanded into Superstore sites; the SuperValu name is still in use in ...
3 Non-conventional banners with in-store grocery markets. 4 Defunct chains. ... This is a list of supermarket chains in Canada. ... Real Canadian Superstore;
Loblaw entered Atlantic Canada through the acquisition of Atlantic Wholesalers, owner of the SaveEasy chain, in 1976. In 1986, the company opened its first large-scale grocery store in Moncton, New Brunswick, using the name The Real Atlantic Superstore.
Maxi is a discount grocery retailer based in Quebec, Canada. Founded in 1984 by Provigo , it is a division of Loblaw Companies [ 1 ] and the largest of Loblaws' Quebec supermarket chains. Maxi is the Quebec equivalent of No Frills , a chain of franchised discount grocery stores outside Quebec, except that Maxi stores are owned by the company.
In 2009, T&T Supermarket was acquired by Loblaw Companies Limited. [5] T&T Supermarket has 36 locations in Canada, and one location in the United States. The stores range in size from 35,000 sq ft (3,300 m 2) to 75,000 sq ft (7,000 m 2).
Loblaw acquired the Dominion chain in Newfoundland outright in 1995, and soon after began implementing its own private-label products and store designs at these locations. Ultimately Dominion's traditional "Big D" logo was replaced with a derivative of the Loblaws logo, rotated to look like a D instead of an L.