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Oct
08

Burroughs-Wellcome Tour Coming Next Weekend

burroughs-wellcome Triangle Modernist Houses continues their excellent series of architectural tours with a tour of the former North American Headquarters for Burroughs-Wellcome. The building was one of Paul Rudolph’s best pieces, and has not been open to the public for decades. It was featured in the strange, salvaged Natalie Wood/Christopher Walken movie “Brainstorm.”

The tour takes place on Saturday, October 20 from 9am to 1pm. Advance tickets are $9.95 and $15 day-of. Tickets and more information are available at the TMH Tour Page .

Sep
16

Morrisville Town and Country Hardware Being Replaced with WalMart Express

A reader named Mike recently alerted me to an interesting retail story going on in Morrisville. It seems that the Town and Country Hardware (“formerly Ace”) at Davis and Morrisville Carpenter is closing on October 31. According to employees, the store’s lease was not renewed and the replacement will be a Wal-Mart Express.

This is interesting on several levels. According to a News & Observer article in July, Wal-Mart has been rolling out 15,000 square foot stores in small towns to compete with large drug stores and Family Dollar stores. Morrisville, however, is suburbia, and there is a full-sized Wal-Mart store very close by at I-540 and 54.

Secondly, this is apparently a dagger to the local Ace Hardware system and consumers’ ability to maintain equipment. A year ago I my lawn mower needed repair, so I took it to the Ace Hardware on Kildaire Road late on a Saturday afternoon. It took the store a month to return the lawn mower because that store is not an actual service site. Rather, they sent all lawn mowers over to “the Davis Drive store” (presumably the one at hand). I’m not sure where Cary’s Ace is sending lawn mowers now, but if they are sending them to North Ridge, it will be 2 months to get one repaired.

It is extremely sad to see stores like this (that offer services to our appliances) drying up. It’s one thing to worry about the amount of garbage we could be composting, but it’s another thing to make servicing expensive items like TVs and lawn mowers so difficult that it is easier and/or cheaper to simply discard the item than to go through the service hassle.

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Jul
20

Lincoln Theatre Announces Slate of Big Shows

Recently the Lincoln Theatre announced a nice group of shows to their late Summer/Fall lineup:

…and others!

Jul
16

Yard House Bought By Darden

yardhouse On Thursday, Orlando-based Darden Restaurants announced that it is acquiring Yard House USA , Inc. Darden is the parent company to such chain restaurants as Red Lobster, Olive Garden, LongHorn Steakhouse, The Capital Grille, Bahama Breeze, Seasons 52, and Eddie V’s. Yard House, a 39-unit chain out of Irvine, CA, is set to open late Summer in the base of the CapTrust tower at North Hills East.

Jun
19

WhichWich Coming to Cameron Village

TBJ is reporting that WhichWich will be coming to Cameron Village this summer. They will be in the space formerly occupied by Quizno’s, next to the ABC Store. They also are reporting that Uncle Fatty’s recently closed, and will be replaced by a sushi/burger concept called Sushi Gami.

May
30

Hector’s Closing

hectors It’s been a tough spring for food lovers in the area. Of course today marks the retirement day of the Triangle’s best restaurant, Magnolia Grill. However one of Raleigh’s best-kept secrets will dim its lights in favor of retirement, too, for two weeks from now.

Walid Sadak was a visiting student from Lebanon when he first took a job at Hector’s in Chapel Hill. Sadak’s dream was to go to dental school, however he eventually concluded it wasn’t for him. At the time Hector’s owner Nick Galifianakis (uncle of actor Zach Galifianakis ) had opened a second Hector’s location in Georgetown when he decided to give Sadak the rights to a Raleigh store as a graduation gift.

Sadak selected a space in the new Crabtree Valley Mall that would serve as the restaurant’s dedicated home for over a decade. (the space is to the right of the Kanki’s mall entrance). The store featured Hector’s trademark look: beige and brown mosaic tile walls, bright orange countertops, terra cotta triangle floor, and a pen and ink frieze depicting a Hector’s stand at a small carnival. The menu was exactly the same as the Chapel Hill store: skewered beef and chicken, a “Hero” sandwich on pita bread, hamburgers, and french fries.

Sadak was happy with the space into the 1980s, but the mall management wanted to consolidate its informal food vendors into one place with a common eating area. The “Food Court” craze was taking American malls by storm, and Sadak reluctantly moved his operation to the new space.

Three decades later Hectors stands as one of the mall’s few original tenants. While the Georgetown and Chapel Hill stores changed hands, moved, and eventually faltered, Sadak’s version of Hector’s grew into one of the best sources of ethnic eating in the Triangle. Along the way Sadak opened a Sutton Square location, a night club, The American Grill, and a phenomenal full-service restaurant on Hillsborough Street. None of them stood the test of time, however, and Hector’s remained Sadak’s primary focus,. He added excellent items through the years such as Raleigh’s first Greek salad and a falafel, and Raleigh’s best baklava, hummus, and tabouli.

Take time in the next two weeks to visit Hector’s for the last time. It will be sorely missed. I highly recommend the Greek salad, tabouli, hummus, chicken kabob, steak & cheese sandwich (with greek salad dressing), and the baklava.

Hector’s is located in the Crabtree Valley Mall Food Court.

May
17

Oro Opens Sunday

oro Here is the press release for the first restaurant to open in the base of the PNC Plaza in downtown Raleigh.:

ORO Restaurant & Lounge located in the PNC Building in Downtown Raleigh, opens for dinner on Sunday, May 20, 2012. ORO, meaning “gold” in Spanish and Italian, features generously portioned, sharable tapas-style comfort food re-interpreted for a modern palate.

Executive Chef and owner Christopher Hylton is a global traveler who brings tastes, textures and flavors from around the world to ORO’s eclectic seasonal menu. Guests can dine on Fried Softshell Crab with Apricot Jalapeno Vinaigrette served with Mango Jicama Salad, Filet Mignon in Sake Brine with Crispy Onions, or Red and Golden Beet Salad with Pickled Watermelon and Smoked Goat Cheese, all for under $15 per item.

In addition, ORO features a custom vertical wine carousel and an innovative 16 wine on-tap system pouring extraordinary wines by the 2 oz., 4 oz., 6 oz. or 8 oz. glass. Guests can opt to try three different wines or hand-crafted cocktails at once by ordering ORO’s customizable samplers.
“ORO was born from love, patience, and a desire to bring a big city dining feel to Raleigh,” said co-owner Cara Zalcberg Hylton, who along husband Christopher Hylton has spent the past three years painstakingly selecting every detail of the restaurant to create just the right experience.
From soft and supple white leather chairs to striking, signature vintage glass chandeliers, ORO’s look and feel is a seemingly effortless balance of elegance and comfort that, like its food, is meant to be savored and shared.

For the high-tech inclined, or anyone who just wants a perfectly timed meal, ORO is using a first-in-North Carolina Apple iPad app that enables servers to send orders to the bar or kitchen instantaneously from the table.

Owned and operated by Hyton Hospitality, ORO is located at 18 East Martin Street in the PNC Building (at the corner of Martin and Wilmington Streets in Downtown Raleigh). Monday through Friday, ORO serves lunch from 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Monday through Thursday, ORO serves dinner 4:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. The restaurant is open until midnight on Friday and Saturday and 9:00 p.m. on Sunday.

May
14

Dental School Puts Two Hotels on North Carolina Avenue

UNC School of Dentistry Welcomes
Modern Era with Dedication of New Building

2012-05-04_16-33-14_586 At the end of April, the UNC School of Dentistry opened a $118 million expansion that greatly enhances the school’s ability to accommodate not only larger class sizes, but to educate more effectively. The facility also positions the school as a worldwide leader in dental research.

The UNC School of Dentistry started out of a Quonset hut in some woods near the UNC Hospital in 1954. A few years later the “Old Dental Building” was erected and set the school on the path to being one of the South’s finest. However in 1969 the school opened Brauer Hall, 5-story complex that housed both clinical and educational spaces. It was an important step as the school was able to both grow its class sizes and split its clinics into specialized spaces.

2012-05-04_16-38-32_23 However as the next couple of decades passed, the school found itself unable to keep up with the state’s burgeoning population, and found itself with outdated clinical spaces that no longer met the standards of modern dental technology. With a boost from Butler leader Bud Tarrson and his wife Linda, the school opened Tarrson Hall, a 5-story companion to Brauer Hall, in 1997 that solely included clinical spaces to meet the school’s needs.

While Tarrson Hall greatly improved the patient care the school provided, it was an architectural paradox. At the dismay of myself and many Class of 1996 classmates, the school chose to extend the 1969 Internationalist façade from Brauer Hall onto Tarrson Hall. Yes, it was aesthetically consistent, but so are his-and-hers El Caminos. Functionally, however, the folks at Odell in Charlotte designed a masterpiece. Tarrson Hall pulled the patient experience toward the corner of the complex closest to the parking decks, allowing the school to renovate the opposite end of the school in a manner that best satisfied educational and research needs. No longer were patients seen ambling through student locker rooms and janitors’ closets looking for hidden clinical spaces. Tarrson simply restored logic to was the functional spaghetti of the 70s and 80s dental complex.

2012-05-04_15-43-54_397 In 2000 the citizens of North Carolina approved a massive bond initiative that saw every UNC campus greatly improve its physical campus. At the end of this parade is the Koury Oral Health Sciences “building”. Composed of two fused buildings that greatly resemble hotels in the game Monopoly, the facility replaces two minor buildings of the once 5-building dental complex. It adds a new hands-on simulation lab for teaching clinical skills to dental students, a large auditorium, a large classroom, research labs, and numerous conference spaces. Not only will current and future students benefit, but also practicing dentists, as continuing education courses can perhaps find their way back into the “schoolhouse”. Koury is its own building, but that is easy to forget as architects utilized the resulting gangway as a large multipurpose atrium.

2012-05-04_15-44-22_914 I took a brief tour of the facility last week and was duly impressed with the amount of detail and foresight that went into not only the design but the execution as well. The building is so well integrated that one is almost surprised to encounter any disconnect with the old complex.

It is better to think of Koury as a crescent that lines the western border of the complex. The needs for this building are quite different than those served by Brauer Hall, so architects eschewed floor height constraints set forth by the existing complex. Lab and large class spaces need high ceilings, so each floor is taller than those in Brauer, which creates a “malocclusion”, if you will, between the upper floors in the complex. The connection to Brauer Hall’s third floor is on a floating stairway landing, and connections to the Old Dental building are engaged by stairway landings and a two-sided elevator as well.

2012-05-04_15-58-31_189 The teaching lab space in Koury is fantastic, easily serving a class size of 100 or more (Since 1969 the school could accommodate class sizes in the 75-83 range). Not only is the space bigger, the lab benches are updated with brand new equipment, and the A/V presentation system is up to date. More impressive, though, is the open space afforded by surprisingly few columns. This is more helpful to large class lab teaching than one would initially expect. The column issue is quickly noticed upon entering one of the recently renovated labs in Brauer Hall.

2012-05-04_16-41-09_48 The large auditorium and the classroom are also fantastic, and are on par with the superb facilities found in other graduate school spaces on campus such as the Kenan-Flagler Business School. Additionally, the lab spaces are excellent, and presumably are the finest educational setting dental lab research spaces in the world.

As the science of Dentistry has evolved of the last half-century, so has the science of Education. In our four year period in the school, we were largely “lectured at” in lecture halls scattered throughout the dental and medical complex. They were cramped, run-down auditoriums that had been long-since converted into low-rise movie theater arrangements. Today’s era of education, however, advocates many more small group/discussion experiences. We saw hints of this style coming on in the 90’s, but the school, frankly, did not have the facilities to host such a model. Koury affords several locations for small group learning. I counted six conference rooms, but other minor spaces also exist.

The delivery of information has greatly changed since the mid-90’s. When we were not in lecture halls, we were in the basement of the Health Science Library viewing tapes of the driest of content. Now with the internet aiding this content’s delivery and the variety of spaces in Koury, students can learn the same material in a variety of ways with more flexibility.

2012-05-04_16-40-23_805 The L-shaped atrium is one of the most fascinating pieces to the new dental complex. What was once a baron, dirty service entrance to Brauer Hall is now an excellent multipurpose space. Hallways in all of Koury’s five floors overlook the space which is largely lit by skylights during the day. The floor space of the atrium contains a new offering to the dental complex; a snack bar. The adjoining tables in the atrium all are located near numerous inset electrical receptacles in the floor, so the space can be used for small group study and other purposes at any hour.

Perhaps the most interesting element to the atrium, however, is the multifunctional elevator/stair column that now sits in the old connector space between Brauer Hall and the Old Dental Building. The landing facing the rest of the atrium contains a lectern, allowing one to address the cavernous room. From the the lecturer’s point of view, the atrium floor is not the only location imagined for the audience. There are perches on higher floors as well as the far corners of the atrium. This allows excellent sightlines for the audience of potentially hundreds in a space that for so many similar projects is discarded.

Most notable to drivers on Manning Driver, however, is the new pedestrian bridge that connects the second floor of Koury to the cafeteria in the Bowles building. This is another example of flawless design and execution, as pedestrians no longer have to dangerously cross one of UNC’s grand avenues.

2012-05-04_16-35-59_155 Crossing the bridge is a pleasing experience. The walkway is covered in bricks, and feels like a continuation of the plaza spaces on each end, and is consistent with the more aesthetic older areas of the campus. The east view from the bridge is one of the best  public views in Chapel Hill, too. Finally, the drainage system for the bridge is outstanding without causing a danger to those wearing heels.

There are a few problems with the additional facilities, though. The entire West façade of the South half of Koury integrates the sidewalk, offering pedestrians a covered walkway insulated from cars on Columbia Street. However this cover stops short of the Koury main pedestrian entrance, leaving a disjointed experience. Furthermore, the walkway extending north to the Health Sciences Library immediately swerves toward the road and exposes pedestrians to what is essentially a highway. Also, there is a clearing of land where the old Dental Office Building was that could have been converted into a small transportation plaza that would have been better than the current Health Sciences Library bus stop.

Photo May 04, 5 05 46 PM Also, the west end of the atrium floor is on a level that is a couple of steps up from the main room. These two terrazzo steps, found at the bottom of the main Koury staircase, are not permanently marked and are not seen easily by those who have completed their move down the stairs. Finally, the receptacles in the floor of the atrium are already getting torn up by the café furniture. A different design is needed for these to continue to be functional and safe.

There is so much more to the Koury building than can be appreciated in a simple tour during a dormant week for the school. A whole chapter could be written about the lab spaces as well as the building’s pursuit of LEED Gold certification. However it is fair to say that the complex almost perfectly satisfies the needs of the school in the Modern Era. The steering committee, designers at Flad & Associates, and builders are to be commended for making the UNC School of Dentistry the marquis dental education facility in the world for years to come.

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Apr
20

“Late Night with Jimmy Fallon” Coming to UNC

On Tuesday, April 24, “Late Night with Jimmy Fallon” will tape their show from UNC. The show’s primary guest will by President Obama. Ticketing information is not available yet.

Apr
16

City Council to Pick Site 4 Developer

20050827-876 In February, the Raleigh City Council released a Request for Proposals for development of the storied Site 4 location in downtown. In Tuesday’s 1pm meeting (video stream), the Council will select a developer to build a new hotel on the site.

A boutique hotel was once planned for the site, however funding was unobtainable by the developer within a reasonable period, and the city retracted their selection and waited for the economy to recover. Now there are three developers proposing projects for the site:

  • Summit Hospitality Group, Ltd.
  • Raleigh Prime Investors, LLC
  • Noble DLR Group

A selection committee of city staff and others reviewed the proposals and recommends the Summit Hospitality Group plan to build an Overcash Demmitt -designed Residence Inn of about 9 stories.

It’s been a long, long while since there has been this much ( any ) activity in the private sector, so we should probably just be happy that something is being built. However this building will be around a long time, and will contribute to the downtown Raleigh “Money shot”, so while the hotel doesn’t have to be a lavish design, it should stand for quality instead of just meeting a budget.

Overcash Demmitt has some interesting projects and some monotonous cookie cutter garbage. Hopefully we’ll see a project that more closely resembles the Charleston Hotel than the Hilton Garden (College Park, GA). Given the standard that has been set by hotel design in those blocks, well…we’ll see.

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Apr
05

100 Great Concerts Coming to Raleigh

The Walt Summer is just around the corner, and that means another great concert season in Raleigh. From now until the end of September, there is a slew of shows guaranteed to ramp up the fun rate in the area. In fact, there are very few dates between now and mid-June that have no event scheduled, so save up, and get out of the house!

There are 100s of good entertainment options coming this summer. The best 100 of them (as of today) are assembled below. Click the venue name for ticket information, opening acts, directions, and more.

In addition, soon, all of these events will appear individually in the gogoraleigh DoIt Calendar , so you can easily add any event to your personal calendar.

Date Event Location
4/6 Alabama Shakes Cat’s Cradle
4/7 Daughtry Greensboro Coliseum
4/7 Loretta Lynn DPAC, Durham
4/7 We Were Promised Jetpacks Motorco Music Hall Durham
4/9 Joan Osborne Lincoln Theater, Raleigh
4/10 Kevin James DPAC, Durham
4/11 Daniel Tosh DPAC, Durham
4/11 Magnetic Fields Cat’s Cradle
4/12 Magnetic Fields Cat’s Cradle
4/13 Lewis Black DPAC, Durham
4/14 Lambchop Motorco Music Hall Durham
4/14 Martina McBride DPAC, Durham
4/15 Cake Downtown Raleigh Amphitheater
4/15 Patti Labelle DPAC, Durham
4/17 Mickey Hart Cat’s Cradle
4/18 !!!/Shabazz Palaces Motorco Music Hall Durham
4/18 Buddy Guy Carolina Theatre
4/18 World Series of Comedy Begins Goodnights Comedy Club Raleigh
4/19 Drive-By Truckers Cat’s Cradle
4/21 Amy Ray Carolina Theatre
4/21 Dayglow Downtown Raleigh Amphitheater
4/21 Van Halen/Kool & The Gang Greensboro Coliseum
4/23 Candlebox Lincoln Theater, Raleigh
4/25 Bela Fleck & The Flecktones Memorial Hall (UNC)
4/26 Needtobreathe Memorial Auditorium, Raleigh
4/26 Tommy Johnagin begins Goodnights Comedy Club Raleigh
4/28 Sugarland Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion
4/29 Elvis Costello DPAC, Durham
4/29 The Beach Boys Downtown Raleigh Amphitheater
4/29 The English Beat Cat’s Cradle
5/2 Mayer Hawthorne Lincoln Theater, Raleigh
5/2 Nick Lowe/Tift Merritt Fletcher Opera Theater, Raleigh
5/3 Feist Memorial Auditorium, Raleigh
5/5 Beach House Cat’s Cradle
5/9 Esperanza Spalding Carolina Theatre
5/10 Greg Morton Goodnights Comedy Club Raleigh
5/11 Kevin Hart Greensboro Coliseum
5/11 Mike Doughty Carolina Theatre
5/11 Ryan Montbleau Lincoln Theater, Raleigh
5/11 Zac Brown Band Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion
5/12 Archers of Loaf King’s Barcade, Raleigh
5/12 B-52s/ Band Together Benefit Booth Amphitheatre, Cary
5/12 Spiritualized Cat’s Cradle
5/13 Coheed and Cambria Lincoln Theater, Raleigh
5/13 New Edition PNC Arena
5/15 Madeleine Peyroux Carolina Theatre
5/16 Collective Soul Lincoln Theater, Raleigh
5/16 Jonny Lang Carolina Theatre
5/17 Rhett Miller ArtsCenter, Carrboro
5/18 Dar Williams ArtsCenter, Carrboro
5/18 Dierks Bentley Greensboro Coliseum
5/19 David Allan Coe Lincoln Theater, Raleigh
5/22 Jane’s Addiction/The Duke Spirit Memorial Auditorium, Raleigh
5/23 St. Vincent Cat’s Cradle
5/26 The Polyphonic Spree Cat’s Cradle
5/27 Keith Sweat Greensboro Coliseum
5/29 Natalie Merchant Meymandi Hall, Raleigh
6/2 A Prairie Home Companion Booth Amphitheatre, Cary
6/2 Yanni Memorial Auditorium, Raleigh
6/3 Steve Martin and Steep Canyon Rangers DPAC, Durham
6/8 Lady Antebellum/D. Rucker/T. Square Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion
6/12 Gavin DeGraw/Colbie Caillat Downtown Raleigh Amphitheater
6/15 Apassionata begins PNC Arena
6/17 Anita Baker DPAC, Durham
6/21 Aziz Ansari Meymandi Hall, Raleigh
6/22 The Wailers The Longbranch, Raleigh
6/24 Vince Gill DPAC, Durham
7/6 The Jacksons Downtown Raleigh Amphitheater
7/8 Crosby, Stills & Nash DPAC, Durham
7/9 Hot Tuna ArtsCenter, Carrboro
7/9 Roger Waters PNC Arena
7/11 Furthur Booth Amphitheatre, Cary
7/12 Barenaked Ladies/Blues Traveler/Big Head Todd/Cracker Downtown Raleigh Amphitheater
7/13 Best Coast Cat’s Cradle
7/14 Everclear/Sugar Ray/Gin Blossoms/Lit/Marcy Pground Downtown Raleigh Amphitheater
7/14 Neko Case NCMA Amphitheater, Raleigh
7/15 Toby Keith Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion
7/22 KISS/Motley Crue Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion
7/25 311/Slightly Stoopid Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion
7/27 Jason Aldean Raleigh (venue TBD)
7/30 Nickelback/Bush Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion
8/1 Maze w/ Frankie Beverly Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion
8/1 Rod Stewart/Stevie Nicks Greensboro Coliseum
8/4 Little Feat Cat’s Cradle
8/5 Chicago/Doobie Brothers Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion
8/8 O.A.R. Downtown Raleigh Amphitheater
8/10 Rascal Flatts/Little Big Town Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion
8/11 ABBA Booth Amphitheatre, Cary
8/15 Cirque Du Soleil DRALION begins PNC Arena
8/18 George Jones DPAC, Durham
8/19 Jason Mraz Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion
8/21 Duran Duran DPAC, Durham
8/22 Big Time Rush/Cody Simpson Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion
8/24 Brad Paisley/The Band Perry/Easton Corbin Time Warner Cable Music Pavilion
8/25 Mary Chapin Carpenter NCMA Amphitheater, Raleigh
9/6 Hopscotch Music Festival Begins Downtown Raleigh venues
9/15 John Tesh Carolina Theatre
9/15 The Feelies Cat’s Cradle
9/29 Ian Anderson DPAC, Durham
9/29 The Fresh Beat Band Downtown Raleigh Amphitheater
Mar
20

NCMNS Nature Research Center Gala, Grand Opening Set

NRC The expansion of the the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences is almost open! On April 20 and 21 the museum will host Our Universe is Expanding , a 24-hour celebration. The facility will house four research laboratories used by scientific staff from the Nature Research Center (NRC), the museum, UNC System, and visiting scientists. Visitors can observe these spaces as well as participate in interactive and multimedia exhibits. There is a slate of events scheduled for the opening, and all events are free to the public.

Grand Opening:

Gala

The weekend before the grand opening, however, is the Grand Opening Gala . The event, which takes place on the evening of Friday, April 13, will feature performances from the TFC Band, Mark Wells QUartet, The Magic of African Rhythm, Mickey Mills Steel Drum Band, and Infinity Circus. There will be food and an open bar at this black tie optional event. Tickets are $200 each and include the After Party events.

gala The Gala After Party begins at 10pm and includes a late night menu, test tube shooters, an open bar and dancing to The Crooked Smile Trio , TFC Band , and Al Ski-Love (a video DJ) in the three-story surround screen “Daily Planet Disco”. Tickets for this event are $75.

Gala:

The NRC will be an excellent addition to downtown Raleigh this year, and its stellar grand opening isn’t to be missed!

Feb
29

Harris Teeter Ends 10-Off-40 Promotion

Two years ago Harris Teeter opened a new store in the parking garage of North Hills East to the chagrin of many area residents. The store was awkward to access, had no internet access, and featured a two-story layout that burdened shoppers in their quest for basic items. Shortly after the crowd roared, Harris Teeter responded by rearranging the store, banishing less popular items to the upstairs.

The store also started a direct mail campaign that offered its neighbors a $10 off any purchase of $40 or more. It was such a powerful incentive, many customers returned and became familiar with the store’s layout.

Recently we noticed that the direc mail flyers were more cleverly disguised among our junk mail. However we haven’t received a flyers in a few weeks. According to readers and a store representative the promotion has ended. Apparently the company feels the numbers for the store are close enough to projections.

So what now? Will this change affect your store selection?

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