Eater Denver I Prairie Dog Pub & Grill Now Open in Littleton

Prairie Dog & Grill now open at our listing at Coal Mine Centre in Littleton.

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Prairie Dog Pub & Grill has recently opened in Littleton at 5935 South Zang Street. With friendly staff, the new restaurant and bar brings classic pub fare to an area that still has limited options. Among guests favorites are the nachos, Prairie Dog burger, and fried pickles.

Check out the nice, quiet patio and keep an eye out for the ladies night and other specials.
 
Read more: Eater Denver – Prairie Dog Pub & Grill Now Open in Littleton
Property brochure: http://www.creginc.com/pdf/Littleton_CoalMineCentre.pdf
Re-posted by: Crosbie Real Estate Group

Supermarket News I Convenience, technology leading small-store push at Walmart

Image Wal-Mart Stores will open more small stores than big stores in the U.S. this year, underscoring not only that more convenient concepts like Neighborhood Markets are outperforming their larger sibling Supercenters, but a concurrent company-wide effort to use digital technologies to make those small stores behave like large stores when shoppers want them to.

Several presentations during media events at the retailer’s annual shareholders meeting in Bentonville, Ark., on Thursday reflected that theme, including a tour of Walmart’s newest and smallest concept, the Walmart to Go convenience store, and a review of plans for a 15,000-square-foot site dedicated to Internet grocery pickup, set to open here later this year.

The 5,000-square-foot Walmart to Go, carrying just 3,500 SKUs, offers the same prices on identical items from a neighboring 180,000-square-foot Supercenter. Its offerings include c-store staples like fresh coffee, soft drinks as well as hot foods to go provided by a local deli that’s set up a kitchen there.

The as-yet unnamed and unbuilt internet pick-up outlet will carry some 10,000 SKUs and be staffed by logistics employees at Walmart. They will assemble orders made online and deliver to cars in as many as 30 drive-up lanes. The concept is based on a similar offering at Walmart’s United Kingdom banner, Asda, said Judith McKenna, chief development officer at Walmart and a former Asda exec.

Bill Simon, Walmart’s U.S. CEO, said that he saw the opportunity to open the 42,000-square-foot prototype Neighborhood Market grocery stores at a faster rate than the 180 to 200 planned this year. There are approximately 367 such stores today.

The still-smaller Walmart Express model has about 20 stores today, and is still in an evaluation stage, Simon explained, although he expressed enthusiasm for a new unit in North Carolina “thethered” to a larger Supercenter, providing shoppers the opportunity through the Internet and mobile applications to shop the entire breadth of a Supercenter for pick-up at the small store.

“What we’re trying to do with Express right now is build a model that has the ability to project nationally,” Simon said. “Our numbers are really big in every respect and we’re confident today that Neighborhood Markets will have a positive material impact on the company, that’s why we’re going through with that [store growth].”

Read More: http://supermarketnews.com/small-format-supermarket/convenience-technology-leading-small-store-push-walmart#ixzz34A7z148y
Re-posted by: Crosbie Real Estate Group