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Bottom Dollar was created by parent Delhaize America at the same time as the upscale chain Bloom in 2004. [2] The first Bottom Dollar Food opened in High Point, North Carolina, on September 21, 2005, and eventually there were around 30 stores in North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, and Ohio [3] before the expansion into other states in 2010.
Grocery Outlet Holding Corp. is an American discount closeout retailer consisting exclusively of supermarket locations that offer discounted, overstocked, and closeout products from name-brand and private-label suppliers.
In January 2012, Delhaize announced that it would close six Bottom Dollar stores and convert 22 others to Food Lion supermarkets as part of a restructuring. [40] [41] In August 2014, it was reported that Delhaize was putting the entire portfolio of Bottom Dollar Food locations up for sale. [42]
Bottom Dollar may refer to: Bottom Dollar Food, an American soft-discount grocery chain; Bottom Dollar, a 2002 album by Nathan Wiley
Delchamps opened its first supermarket at the intersection of St. Louis Street and Washington Avenue in 1928. This was the largest grocery store in Mobile and, moreover, the largest food store in Alabama. Three years later, in 1931, Delchamps opened its first out of state location in Pensacola, Florida. A rival grocery chain, the Coleman ...
Bottom Dollar Food; Burlington (department store) C. Cook's (department store) Costco; Cub (supermarket) D. Dollar General; Dollar Tree; E. Everything's A Dollar; F ...
The company currently operates more than 325 retail grocery, convenience, and neighborhood market stores across 14 states, through their Houchens Food Group subsidiary. Complemented by a strong foundation of diverse companies and over 15,000 employees corporate-wide, Houchens Industries is listed by Forbes as one of the largest 100% employee ...
The Dutch retail food conglomerate Ahold, which had entered the U.S. through its purchase of Bi-Lo Supermarkets in the Southeastern U.S. in 1977, purchased Finast in 1988. Ahold completed the process of converting the last Pick-N-Pay stores to Finast in 1994. [2]