Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
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]
Pages in category "Defunct department stores based in the San Francisco Bay Area" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
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.
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 ...
John Chachas, the owner of luxury department store Gump’s San Francisco, wrote an open letter to Governor Newsom, Mayor London Breed, and the city’s Board of Supervisors, pleading for them to ...
Nordstrom closed the doors of its five-story department store in San Francisco on Sunday, ending a 35-year run as the city suffers a retail exodus.
The company merged with Bell Markets in the mid-1970s. Bell Markets was founded in the 1940s when Dominick Bell and his two brothers opened a supermarket in San Francisco. Cala Foods was the first supermarket chain in San Francisco to stay open 24 hours per day, and one of the first in the US to use checkout scanners. [1]
In 1966, 20,000 square feet was added to the two year-old West Los Angeles store to handle the increase of business. [26] [27] Later in the same year, a store was opened at the Northpoint Shopping Center in San Francisco. [28] According to a 1966 article in the Times, this was the first store in San Francisco and the tenth in the chain. [28]