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Nisa Local shop in Bingley in June 2012. Nisa was founded as the Northern Independent Supermarkets Association by Peter Garvin and Dudley B. Ramsden in 1977. [8] It was formed as a mutual organisation owned by its members and operating "...like a co-operative, using the collective buying power of the large group of members to negotiate deals with suppliers".
Symbol group run by Nisa, which had 50 shops nationwide by 2013 [44] Fascia retired and replaced with Nisa Express format. [45] Misselbrook & Weston (M&W) Original operator of One Stop, later bought out by T&S Stores operator of Dillons: Melias: Bought by Dee Corporation Chain of convenience shops owned by Fine Fare; rebranded or sold after ...
As of 2013, Filco has 8 stores [1] and operates as part of the Nisa group. Filco Foods was founded by Phillip Jones in 1946. [2] The original location opened on Wine Street in Llantwit Major in 1946. Goods were packaged and delivered according to the customer shopping lists. In 2010 the company celebrated its 65th anniversary with a charity drive.
Sheetz – locations throughout Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia, Maryland, Virginia, and North Carolina; Tom's Convenience Store (York) – locations throughout central Pennsylvania; Turkey Hill Minit Markets – locations throughout central and eastern Pennsylvania, central Ohio, and central Indiana.
Nisa is a wholesaler and symbol group which was acquired in 2018 and supplies thousands of independent stores directly or through other symbol groups such as Costcutter Supermarkets Group. Unlike some of its competitors, Nisa does not own or operate its own store estate. [83] [84]
Polaris Fashion Place is a two level shopping mall and surrounding retail plaza serving Columbus, Ohio, United States.The mall, owned locally by Washington Prime Group, is located off Interstate 71 on Polaris Parkway in Delaware County just to the north of the boundary between Delaware and Franklin County.
The current model of convenience store/fast food hybrids that include Mc Donald's, Taco Bell, and others into convenience store locations, can well be traced back to the successful implementation of Creole Fried Chicken into the Jr. Food Mart store designs.
The chain began life as the convenience store chain for Atlantic Petroleum in 1985, which was spun off from ARCO, Inc. (ARCO itself was formed from the 1966 merger of Atlantic Refining and Richfield Oil.) The first Aplus stores were rebranded ampm locations. [citation needed]