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Today, Ralphs competes with Albertsons (including Vons) and Stater Bros. Its slogan is "Fresh for Everyone," also used by all other Kroger grocery store brands. [10] Ralphs is the current market share leader in Southern California. Exterior of a Ralphs store in Encino, Los Angeles which closed in January 2020 (Store #219)
Ralphs operated a grocery store on the site until the mid-1960s, when it left Westwood Village. [2] Ralphs returned to Westwood Village nearly 40 years later, converting the old Bullock's department store into a grocery store (formerly sharing the space with a Best Buy and an Expo Home Design Center). Since Ralphs vacated the building in the ...
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For example, in 1980, a Cupertino, California, Alpha Beta store sold Bohsei color TVs for under $200 (~$763.00 in 2024), Atari 400 and 800 computers, and other goods. In September 1991, Skaggs-Alpha Beta re-branded its 76 stores in Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico and Arkansas as Jewel-Osco, in an attempt to unify some of its subsidiaries under one ...
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A parking lot with the address 8055 Irvine Center Drive was selected as the site of the project. During an Irvine Planning Commission meeting on July 3, 2014, officials promised the tower would be LEED Gold certified and advertised the building plan as having a "satin" stainless steel finish and a "necklace of palm trees" around its perimeter ...
Kroger Co. owned Ralphs Grocery Co. supermarkets grocery chain, pleaded guilty to hiring replacement workers during the 2003-2004 Southern California grocery strike. Federal District Court assessed Ralphs a $70 Million penalty: $20 Million as a fine, and $50 Million as restitution to reimburse striked workers and their union.
In 1982, Kroger decided to exit the competitive Southern California supermarket business and broke up the 65 store Market Basket chain by selling many of stores to Ralphs, Boys, Hughes and Vons while closing the rest. At that time, the Market Basket name was retired while Kroger kept the rights to the Market Basket brand within California. [5]