Hey, there! Log in / Register

Landmark Hispanic market in Jamaica Plain to be replaced by a Whole Foods

The Jamaica Plain Gazette sounds the death knell for Hi-Lo, 415 Centre St.

Neighborhoods: 
Topics: 
Free tagging: 


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Comments

Sweet!

up
Voting closed 0

When can we get a Starbucks near HydeSquare/Jackson/RoxXing/etc? Or any coffee shop? Only things around are Butterfly Coffee (which is awesome, but gets crowded) and City Feed (zzzz...)

Flat Black, are you listening?

up
Voting closed 0

well in Hyde Square both Velouria and June Bug recently went under in, that doesnt bode well for future outings. But in addition to your list there is JP Licks which has great coffee and is essentially a cafe during the day, Canto 6, and...... yeah I can't think of any beyond that.

I would love to see some more cafes in the area, but not bad enough to suffer starbucks or more dunkies.

up
Voting closed 0

.

up
Voting closed 0

i didn't mean to suggest it is... if I did my response would be to tell you roxbury has 40 cafes already.

up
Voting closed 0

neither is starbucks

up
Voting closed 0

This is going to confuse the hipsters. It will be very interesting to see what their reaction will be.

up
Voting closed 0

"We just invested in the expansion of City Feed"

Say WHAT? Why did the city do ANYTHING to help that overpriced hipster convenience store?

up
Voting closed 0

Interesting article in the JP Gazette. The focus is not on the loss of a market that provides, good affordable food, not to mention irreplaceable variety, but on keeping chains out of JP.

The tone of the article speaks to the loco-organic gentry who have saturated JP.

It'll be interesting to see how the much celebrated, but hardly affordable City Feed does with competition.

up
Voting closed 0

whole foods is affordable? I certainly can't afford the one on Washington Street.

up
Voting closed 0

If you do a price comparison on same (or close) items, you'll find that WF is quite competitive on staples. It's just that their high end is a lot higher. Go a google search to see the results of comparisons that others have done if you don't have the time to do them yourself.

up
Voting closed 0

We've shopped Hi-Lo for a long time and have directed Bostonians and visitors alike there. It's the other kind of organic, the original, with stuff you don't can't find in the chain supermarkets. Damn.

up
Voting closed 0

I wish they'd replace the Stop and Shop with WF (or even better, TJs) and keep Hi-Lo.

up
Voting closed 0

That would be an ideal plug-in. The Jackson S&S is sad.

up
Voting closed 0

...hope they'll carry Luker Chocolate distributed by Goya!
see also
http://www.google.com/images?q=luker%20chocolate

up
Voting closed 0

Nooooo!!

I just discovered the Hi-Lo! Best place around for chicken necks and pork necks, not to mention Dulce De Leche candy! Very sad. :(

up
Voting closed 0

will patronize Whole Foods in droves. I, however, don't shop there and don't plan to start. (unless it gets cheaper!)

up
Voting closed 0

Whole Foods has better prices than Stop and Shop and Shaws on most identical items. They just don't carry the cheapest of cheap varieties at all; they don't sell anything with HFCS or trans fat. For instance, Amy's soups are cheaper there than anywhere else, but they don't carry 33-cent-per-can tomato soup made of corn syrup and MSG, which means that the cheapest soup available is going to be more than at other stores. It makes sense that a lot of the dairy-free and such items are going to be less at WF, since they do more volume of this stuff.

It's really too bad that their marketing and reputation and whatnot is that they're expensive. I work with a number of low-income families who are either trying special diets for their kids with allergies/medical issues or just wanting to eat healthy, and they'll tell me how they're committed to doing this, but frustrated that a particular item was so expensive at S&S. When I tell them that some of these items are cheaper at WF, they're surprised and said they hadn't even gone in there (or in TJs) because they'd been told those were the stores for rich people where everything costs twice as much.

up
Voting closed 0

I also find that WF's reputation as being "really expensive" is overblown...I think because of their high ticket items that everyone sees...but I don't get those. If you want extremely expensive hot chocolate, you can get that.

However, things like cereal, orange juice, clif bars, yogurt, frozen staples...I find these are all competitive if not cheaper than Roche Bros. where we used to go.

up
Voting closed 0

Right, they have $50 truffle oil and all kinds of imported craziness, but they're generally cheaper for the same items. Oh, and the 365 brand stuff is awesome. Some of the stuff, if you look at the label, is clearly made in the same place as Annie's and Amy's and Kashi and whoever else but just doesn't have the brand-name label; same ingredients, same nutrition information, factory located in same city.

up
Voting closed 0

This is terrible. I really really enjoy the Hi Lo, and worse, what will happen to the thousands of Spanish people who shop there? Or use WIC? Where will they go?

This is another defeat for those of a lower socioeconomic status. :(

Plus, Whole Paycheck stinks. At least make it a Trader Joes.

up
Voting closed 0

Stop & Shop? In Jackson?

up
Voting closed 0

worse, what will happen to the thousands of Spanish people who shop there?

If there were thousands of Spanish people who shopped there, Hi-Lo wouldn't have gone out of business.

Folks, it's called supply and demand...

up
Voting closed 0

Supply and demand is just an economic model for setting the price point of a product.

However, closing a store (aside from the owner retiring or selling it out) is a simple matter of net profit based on whether they made enough income to at least cover costs. In that way, thousands, or even millions, of people could have been shopping there and it could have closed anyways. Most often, this has to do with a rise in costs (rent, payroll, bills) and not a loss of income.

up
Voting closed 0

I wouldn't count on Hi-Lo being unprofitable at all. This is more likely along the lines of the Dough Boy shops. They did just fine, but Dunkin' wanted those locations and paid big for them. Such deals are secondary or tertiary to supply and demand. Here, the larger corporation sees profits and traffic and location as is. They gamble they can do even better and skew the simple formula.

up
Voting closed 0

TJs would be better, I agree.

TJs and Whole Foods do both take SNAP (food stamps), which is what people use to buy their groceries from day to day. The Boston-area WFs and TJs don't take WIC, which is the program that gives checks to buy certain foods (cereal, formula, etc.) that families generally cash in once a month or so. There are locations in other places that take WIC because the community has lobbied them to do so.

I'd be behind anything convincing any store to take WIC, but this really isn't such an issue as if a store refused to take food stamps. Generally a family will have several hundred dollars per month on their food stamps card that allows them to buy just about anything that's considered food, whereas their WIC check for the month might have a few cans of infant formula, some cheese, a box of Cheerios, a bag of carrots.

EDIT: Oh, and I actually see it as a plus when more people are using their SNAP card at higher-profile stores. At many many convenience-type stores and mom-and-pop-type stores, the owners are willing to sell people cigarettes and other non-food items with their SNAP card, ringing it up as food. This isn't as likely to happen at a large grocery store. In general I'm in favor of locally owned family businesses, but the abuse of SNAP is rampant, so I'm all for people using it at places where the store owners are more likely to be responsible about it.

up
Voting closed 0

Whole Foods takes WIC. And I agree with other posters--they're expensive but not more so than Stop & Shop if you're buying basic staples. No one in Hyde Square is going to starve. And not to mention, WF is a good employer--there'll be plenty of jobs there.

up
Voting closed 0

There goes diversity, crushed under the yuppie steamroller. And it's the Whole Foods shoppers who love to talk about JP diversity the most.

up
Voting closed 0

If you really think diversity has been crushed in northern JP, just starting walking down Centre St towards Jackson Square station. Lots of bodega, latin restaurants, hair places, etc... Keep walking into Fort Hill and you'll be into an even more diverse neighborhood.

up
Voting closed 0

i'm sure you would consider my wife and me to be yuppies or hipsters or whatever, we have multiple CSA memberships and ride bikes and love diversity and localism, etc., but i have never shopped at a whole foods. I think the HiLo closing sucks, but partially because its great sign and facade will be homogenized into the generic whole foods strip mall architecture. We will continue to get staples at harvest and on the weekends get zipcars and shop at roche brothers or russo's.

I have no delusions that the whole foods will be any less than incredibly successful, but believe me there are plenty of people in JP who simply won't shop at a corporate chain.

up
Voting closed 0

Boston could really use a grocery chain like this one: http://www.newseasonsmarket.com/dynamicContent.asp...

up
Voting closed 0

It's called Roche Bros. They just don't make that big a deal about it. But there's a reason there's a community center and an ice-skating rink with "Roche" in the names in West Roxbury.

up
Voting closed 0

I have actually attempted to shop at Hi-Lo--unlike everyone lamenting its awesomeness on this page. I went to get tomatillos, cilantro, plantains, cactus and avocados so I could cook an actual meal this summer. The tomatillos were uniformly moldy and soft, the cilantro was yellow and slimy, the cactus was also covered in fuzzy mold. The avocados and the plantains were fine. The rest of the place was full of blue sugar water in plastic mini-barrels and rice mixes. You can get canned beans at the Stop and Shop. I was really in to Hi-Lo when I went and got cheap limes but when i really tried to put it together to make something it was impossible to do so. I wanted this place to survive but realized it wouldn't in August. Will be delighted for City Feed and The Co-op to have a little competition. Hope they keep the clock. So let's see how many idiotic "hipster" comments we can get.

Whit

up
Voting closed 0

... (well, not from me, it's only a few blocks away from Chez Toaster), but you can get all of your ingredients except sometimes cactus -- I haven't checked the last couple weeks, but they had plantains, tomatillos and avocados on Tuesday, and I've never seen them run out of cilantro or limes. You're better off shopping on weekdays, as the weekends are a madhouse.

A Russo & Sons

We depend upon the fresh and dried fruit for WarriorBabyGirl. And their strawberries were ripe, unlike WholePaychecks.

up
Voting closed 0

Mileage varies, tastes vary, your experience isn't necessarily universal: you're not the only one who has shopped there, cupcake.

I have shopped and will for a short time continue to shop there. Produce I have found to be fair to middling, but its good in a pinch when I need a head of garlic or something and don't want to drop a fin on it at City Feed. There are also plenty of prepackaged things (Goya stuff, dried chiles, mexi-cokes) that can be gotten there for much less than anywhere else.

up
Voting closed 0

Will be delighted for City Feed and The Co-op to have a little competition.

Maybe you didn't notice that Whole Foods is taking Hi-Lo's place? WF will be much more competitive with CF and Harvest than Hi-Lo has been.

up
Voting closed 0

I tried to shop at Hi-Lo a few times and the produce was abysmal crap. As Whit describes, moldy, slimy, yellow, disgusting. If produce isn't a big part of why you go shopping (for me it is), Hi-Lo might fit a need for you. It does have a good variety of prepackaged foods from other countries. But if you cook fresh food, it would have to be only be one of your stops, because you'd have to go elsewhere for the fresh part. Pretty it up by calling it a specialty ethnic supermarket if you want to, but the truth is Hi-Lo is a ghetto supermarket selling mostly non-nutritious ghetto crap. The produce will surely be better at Whole Foods and probably not much more expensive. The folks who shop at Hi-Lo will probably see their nutrition improve if they keep on. The ethnic stuff you can buy plenty of other places, including bodegas and other supermarkets, which will probably step up their buying if there's a real need. It's a win for everybody in the neighborhood except the posers.

up
Voting closed 0

I was actually thinking that instead of a Whole Foods, a Roche Brothers supermarket occupying that space would be great. Doubt that will happen though. It seems like a done deal. I won't lie, I will go to the WF but it won't be my main grocery store.

up
Voting closed 0

Roche Brothers wouldn't deliver to places like Roxbury or even Medford not too long ago - although they would deliver all around them to wealthier, less stereotyped places.

When Roche Bros puts a store in Dudley Square - like New Seasons put one in a culturally diverse and impoverished area of Portland - we'll talk.

up
Voting closed 0

Apparently, the only thing you know about Roche Bros is that they didn't deliver to places you would have liked them to. Here's some info.

The Roche family is one of the most generous families in the Boston area, and is about as low-key about it as one could be. They have personally donated millions of dollars to charities in the area. He recently donated $20 million to BC for Catholic education, and there's a lot more besides that.

Pat Roche still has the modest house in Marshfield that he bought 40+ years ago. He could live anywhere, but it's not important to him. What is important to him is being able to help those less fortunate. This is what he does.

Where Roche Bros does business is a business decision. RB is definitely not a cheap market, and it makes little sense for them to market to places like Dorchester. That's a simple fact, like it or not. If a store in Dorchester would not be profitable for RB, why do it? I'm not familiar with New Seasons. Maybe they have a different business model that would allow them to put a store in Dudley Sq. and still make money.

up
Voting closed 0

They probably only deliver within a certain radius of their stores.

It's unfair to just post a knee-jerk reaction about a business discriminating against certain areas. Roche Bros has been a very good neighbor & contributes to pretty much any group you can think of, constantly donating to local fundraisers, senior groups, schools, etc.

up
Voting closed 0

My area of Medford, which is fairly affluent, was much closer to their new store than areas of Lexington, Winchester, and Stoneham that were in their delivery area. If you looked at their delivery map, Medford was a clear exclusion. It was based on excluding or including entire cities or towns for whatever reason they chose, not delivery radius.

Same issue with their excluding Roxbury and Dorchester deliveries - a straight service area radius would have included parts of these areas, but they chose to exclude based on neighborhood boundaries rather than distance.

I'm guessing that they just didn't bother to find out what their potential market was like and made some assumptions that were inappropriate, from both a social and a business perspective.

up
Voting closed 0

you're assuming they assumed? how many asses does that make?

up
Voting closed 0

I suppose someone could ask them, but I'm guessing they know exactly what their markets are.

I have no idea what the volume of their delivery service is, but a successful business knows how to be a successful business, so I'm guessing, as merlin said, that their business decisions were just that, and maybe you are making inappropriate assumptions.

up
Voting closed 0

I suppose someone could ask them, but I'm guessing they know exactly what their markets are.

My thoughts exactly.

up
Voting closed 0

They simply failed to look at census data - publicly available and free to download data - showing income patterns in the area. I have a hard time believing they did more than rely on outdated stereotypes.

Now that they got set straight by email outrage, I would bet they do far more delivery to Lawrence Estates, Winford, Brooks Estates, and West Medford than to North Woburn, which is far less affluent.

up
Voting closed 0

I've e-mailed them to ask about delivery, noting the same thing (that they'll deliver to further-out areas in the other direction, but not to my place in Rox). Never got a response.

Whole Foods Symphony was doing the same thing for a while; before the store opened near MGH, they'd deliver two miles northward, to all of the North End and downtown, but wouldn't deliver one mile the other way to Roxbury; their map stopped right along where it stops being Fenway/South End and starts being Rox. They now deliver several miles in every direction using what's pretty much a radius, but the old map was obvious that they'd assumed we didn't want WF, or they didn't want to come to our hood, or whatever.

Several of the food delivery companies do the same thing, going to neighborhoods much further than mine, but not mine. Dining In "does not deliver to your ZIP code." When I e-mailed, I got a reply, saying they might expand in the future, but they need to be concerned about the safety of their drivers. Seriously. Dash Boston currently will go PAST my place to deliver from Fenway/South End restaurants to Brookline and Newton, but won't come to 02119. They won't actually change this, telling me to put in a different address to make it go through but tell the restaurant in the notes that I actually want it delivered to my address.

up
Voting closed 0

where do you get your insider info about Roche Bros?
and why are YOU even commenting about a store that
no one in medford is likely to shop in?
shop local, and leave JP alone with our nice, shiny, new
WHOLE FOODS.

Next on the agenda:

Starbucks

up
Voting closed 0

Just because you don't happen to live in West Roxbury or Roslindale and so don't have the slightest idea whom the Roches actually are doesn't seem to have stopped you from commenting.

up
Voting closed 0

Go take a look, 1047. Although it involves a scary informative map and I'm not sure you can handle the cognitive load of pressing a couple of buttons to investigate. They aren't just in Westie anymore.

And, yes, after getting dopeslapped by the local media and listserv e-mail barrages they did put in delivery to Meffuh (from their WoBurlington store). They even sent around discount coupons, which we and our neighbors took advantage of. Maybe they just had to learn the hard way that redlining entire cities out of rank ignorance is bad business. I see their trucks in town all the time.

1047's fact and logic allergy should remain his own business. Good lord - I've met fundamentalist bible college graduates with a greater reality quotient!

up
Voting closed 0

They now deliver to Medford and Cambridge, but not to Somerville or West Somerville which are right in between. Medford is served from the Burlington store, but Cambridge is (surprisingly to me) served from Wellesley.

up
Voting closed 0

It's not just simple geometry.

up
Voting closed 0

Maybe you've heard of it, two towns over from Medford?

up
Voting closed 0

zzzzzzzz

up
Voting closed 0

No one has mentioned Harvest. I don't spend time in JP, so I don't know what I am missing, but I get to Harvest in Central Square once in a while. Is it just not that good?

http://www.harvestcoop.com/

up
Voting closed 0

Live right around the corner from it. It's not as big as the one in Cambridge... more like a little, local market. It's far enough away and small enough of a neighborhood establishment that it should peacefully coexist with the Whole Foods as the Cambridge Harvest does with nearby Whole Foods and Trader Joe's locations.

up
Voting closed 0

Harvest has the stuff WF sells, just less variety in a smaller footprint. Yet, I wonder whether WF is trying to lead the demographics in Northern JP a bit too much. The traditional organic and health-food types already have what they need in Harvest. The Hyde Square area does not have nearly the disposable income level of the Cambridge and Newton abutters of WF.

If this acquisition is typical of higher end chain ones, I'd bet Hi-Lo is profitable enough, but that WF made the owners an offer that dwarfed their current profits for years out.

The space is a very short distance from wealthier Brookline and much, much cheaper than plopping a store there. I bet WF is counting on those who find it inconvenient to drive to the WF behind the TJs off Memorial Drive.

I'm also they miscalculated on this one.

up
Voting closed 0

Harvest is much more expensive than WF, even with the membership.

BTW, there's a WF near Symphony Hall, about 1.5 miles from where this one is going.

There's also one in Brighton on Washington Street on the Brookline line.

up
Voting closed 0

I primarily use it for picking up things I've forgotten or end up needing on a whim. Much more likely to find what I need there than at City Feed (which is so ridiculously overpriced I don't even bother trying to purchase anything there anymore) or the Stop & Shop at Jackson (which might possibly be the worst Stop & Shop in existence).

I think Harvest will continue to do as well as it is- It will be over a mile away from the Whole Foods and it will remain the more convenient option for many of the shoppers that already use it (I usually tie it in with a stop at Polka Dog and I'm quite sure the Whole Foods will be a fucking nightmare during the first few months it is open- don't want to deal with that at all)

up
Voting closed 0

Love Polka Dog! I like Harvest mostly because it has good products, but their meat/poultry/fish department is SEVERELY lacking. That is something Whole Foods does incredibly well!!

up
Voting closed 0

you mean single case in the checkout aisle. Combined with the one-employee deli counter, it's like putting up a big billboard that says "WE TOLERATE OMNIVORES." I'd say meat, fish and poultry are Harvest's weakest point.

up
Voting closed 0

I for one am thrilled that Whole Foods is coming to JP. Hi-Lo served a niche market that will still be served to a large extent by a combination of Stop and Shop and the smaller bodegas in the area. But Whole Foods is a place to get a wide variety of fresh organic produce in JP, and that's something that benefits everyone. Like most places, they're also as expensive or inexpensive as you want them to be. WF has an excellent store brand that is very affordable. (I do hope they keep the Hi-Lo clock, though.)

up
Voting closed 0

Get rid of the working class Latinos, but save that cool clock!

up
Voting closed 0

Niche market, Hillary? It's not coincidence or pretense that Hyde Square bills itself as Boston's Latin Quarter. The niche is is the yuppie and hipster interlopers who visit or rent nearby.

up
Voting closed 0

Okay, so are only Latin businesses allowed to open in the Latin Quarter? Is this an autonomous region with no property rights? Billing yourself for commercial purposes is not the same as controlling the use of private property for one group of people.

up
Voting closed 0

Perhaps we can declare that the new WF will only allow Libertarians and their free-market brethren. Note it was Hillary who claimed that a Latino-goods market was catering to a niche.

up
Voting closed 0

Let them handle their business...damn!

/Kanye'd

up
Voting closed 0

JP has been in need of a decent, full sized grocery store for a pathetically long time. I live in one of the biggest neighborhoods in Boston and I have to drive to either Dorchester, West Roxbury Cambridge or Freaking Dedham to find a well stocked store with good produce. So I'll happily take the WF (and I'll prefer it to a TJs because holyshit TJ produce is uniformly awful).

What I am concerned about is the clusterfuck of traffic this is going to cause on the already difficult to traverse Centre st. I won't be going into the store for the first several months it's open- let the hype die down.

I'd love a Roche Bros or maybe just have Stop & Shop actually give a shit about the location in Jackson, but those things aren't happening. And I can't say I'll miss Hi-Lo- the only thing I ever bought there was Lizano; never could find anything else I needed there.

up
Voting closed 0

didnt even think of the traffic, christ that is going to be a shitshow. Think of the hawks looming in their volvo SUVs weekend afternoons in Brookline, lined up on Washington Street to get a chance to squeeze into the parking lot and wait for a spot to open. On Google Maps I count approximately 130 spaces in that lot. At Hi-Lo, despite the vastness of that lot there are only 50 spots due to its odd geometry. I'm assuming that WF will tear down the existing building and build new, and they may be able to site plan in a way that squeezes 15 more spots out of it. But even then, that doesn't seem like enough to sustain a Whole Foods--will that part of JP go parking permit on the streets? I don't know, it will definitely become an issue.

up
Voting closed 0

.

up
Voting closed 0

I used to go to the Symphony store -- quite small for Whole Foods standards. and they validate 1 hour of parking in the lot next door. Hopefully they will use this model.

I lived in Texas when WF was still just a local chain doing something different so I'm still a fan. When I moved back here and went to a TJ just to try it out and couldn't find some really basic items I decided to stick with WF.

up
Voting closed 0

I've long been puzzled by the lack of large grocery stores in Boston's neighborhoods.I recall being told by a Shaws Real Estate person that grocery stores don't locate in cities because the higher real estate costs preclude them from running profitable stores. I replied (and still wonder) wouldn't the greater density of customers justify those expenses?

There has been nothing in the city that has replaced the smaller markets/chains such as Flanagans (located where the CVS at Central and S. Huntington or Horrigans.

With apologies to some articulate, polite posters who may be hipsters, what is disturbing to many of the old townies is the replacement of economical businesses that were simple, but affordable. I think the perfect example is Triple D's being replaced by "the alchemist". Granted it's an apples and oranges comparison and in fact Triple D's sold to the owners of the alchemist, but the end result is fewer affordable options for folks.

up
Voting closed 0

There are certainly Flanagan's-like stores around. In fact, the old Flanagan's in Hyde Park is now an Americas' Foodbasket. There's the Village Market in Roslindale and the new PriceRight on the Hyde Park/Mattapan line. And isn't there a Flanagan's-type market on Washington Street in JP, near the police station?

One of the best things Menino has done over his reign, in fact, has been to bring supermarkets back into Boston: South Bay, Brigham Circle, Packard's Corner in Allston, for example. Shaw's expanded its store in Hyde Park (and the one in West Roxbury) a few years back; Stop & Shop did the same for its Roslindale store and is in the middle of expanding the one in Hyde Park (true, it did shut its store in West Roxbury, but probably because it built a ginormous new store right over the line in Dedham). Closer to you, there's the Stop & Shop on Centre Street.

up
Voting closed 0

Why is Triple D's and Hi-Lo apples and oranges? They're actually both oranges but they make the same point. When a business that has been in operation for several decades decides to close because they don't want to engage in business anymore and decides to sell or lease their property to another business, don't be surprised when the new business looks like businesses look in 2011 not 1985. Part of the reason for this is because these old "affordable" businesses didn't sell or lease their properties at 1985 rates.

I don't know how to placate people who don't want their urban environments to change commercially and residentially over several decades or rather only want it to change in a fashion that only suits them personally.

The Real Deal opened in the past few years in JP and is simple and affordable. Kennedy Fried Chicken just opened in Jackson and that is simple and affordable. Primo Bros. pizza opened up in the last few years and that is simple and affordable. Sami's Falafel opened up last year and is simple and affordable. These are all newly established businesses that could be classified as "simple and affordable".

"Simple and affordable" is widely available.

up
Voting closed 0

I've lived in JP for 31 years and I have a very mixed reaction to this news. My wife and I love Hi-Lo...it's the only place where we can get decent queso blanco, arepas, avena (the drink), and a whole bunch of other latin foods that we love. And as a long time JP guy, I will go out of my way to buy from locally-owned, non-chain stores. Hi-Lo has been there for decades, and JP loses so much with its closing.

And yet...we also like fresh produce, and well-handled meat. We like non-processed foods. We like store employees who are friendly and knowledgeable about what they sell. We like stores that emphasize and promote local farms and producers. This is what Whole Foods is all about.

It's a huge loss. But I will enthusiastically shop at Whole Foods when & if it comes. But please someone tell me where else I can get ingredients for ajiaco!

up
Voting closed 0

Has anyone thought about what a horrific traffic nightmare this is going to be, both on Center St, Perkins St, and the little Hyde Square rotary? That's what bothers me the most about all of this. Not happy at all.

up
Voting closed 0

Sad to lose a neighborhood resource that Stop and Shop simply can't - or won't - be.

And what will happen to the Mozart & Boylston Street gangs? As it stands now, one gets to shop at Hi-Lo, the other at Stop & Shop. Who will get Whole Foods?

up
Voting closed 0

Some people are getting WAY to upset about this. Balanced view award goes to:

http://www.organicguide.com/organic/news/whole-foo...

100 new jobs and a store that values its employees. Is this all that bad?

up
Voting closed 0