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Arthur Baldocchi partnered with Petrini to open the Petrini Plaza Supermarket [3] near the Fulton and Masonic streets in San Francisco. [4] The Petrini family sold the chain in 1996. [1] The Stonestown location continued to operate under the name Petrini's until 1996. [citation needed]
China Live is a Chinese marketplace in San Francisco, California, described as being of "epic proportions" [1] that comprise various casual and fine dining restaurants, bars and food and beverage outlets. China Live was founded by George and Cindy Chen. George Chen is an entrepreneur, formerly involved in several local landmark restaurants such ...
Off the Grid's flagship market in San Francisco. Off the Grid is a mobile food and events platform in the San Francisco Bay Area of California, USA.The platform is known for galvanizing the San Francisco food truck scene in 2010, [1] Off the Grid activates public and private space via temporary food experiences that include public markets, catering events and employee dining services.
The San Francisco Board of Supervisors is considering a remarkable policy that would allow people to sue grocery stores that close too quickly. ... to the six-month notice requirement. If a store ...
Per foot traffic analytics platform Placer.ai, San Francisco has the lowest number of visits to offices of any major US city.In August 2023, office visits were down 52.7% compared to August 2019 ...
The People's Warehouse was striving to build a “People’s Food System,” including a network of small community food stores throughout San Francisco. [3] In the summer 1975, Rainbow Grocery opened a storefront on 16th Street in the Mission District of San Francisco. At this time, the People's Food System already had two stores in San ...
The chain had over 24 stores throughout Southern California from San Diego to San Francisco before it was forced to close in 1985. In a 2001 interview in Los Angeles Magazine, co-founder Hyman Fink described selling "everything from handkerchiefs to fire hydrants to motorcycles to live Mexican monkeys" in his stores. [1]
QFI was a San Francisco supermarket chain founded in the late 1940s by John Musso. Originally, some QFI locations were leased, resulting in some stores being co-named with others (such as Lick Super Market). By the 1970s, when Musso's son Leo took over, all QFI stores were wholly owned and operated.