Seems like an odd location. Close to Millender Center which has a similar store. Wayne County Building is empty. Very little foot traffic. Other than the Cadillac Sq. Apts., who will it serve?
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Seems like an odd location. Close to Millender Center which has a similar store. Wayne County Building is empty. Very little foot traffic. Other than the Cadillac Sq. Apts., who will it serve?
Sweet, that is in the Lawyer's Building right? It will be great to see something in that building finally.
With Millender and Cadillac Sq Apartments, they have a decent living population, plus Compuware/Quicken folks and Greektown should give them pretty solid day business. Hopefully they put another somewhere near Grand Circus Park. Not sure where the third should go though. That would serve the local resident community better [[Fyfe, Kales, Broderick, DCA, Whitney soon, etc).
Hmmmm, I wonder what kind of lease they signed, I inquired about some space there and they offered me the 3rd floor space [[2500sqf) @ $4500 per month for 5 years w/ my own build out.
I dunno, we've had a K-Mart and Home Depot for years, along with countless CVS, Walgreens, Rite Aids, Aldis, Family Dollars, Starbucks, etc., and that hasn't stopped anyone from saying we don't have any national chains.
Having some corporate standards would be nice. I'm sick to hell of watching liquor store owners dispense loosies from behind ghetto glass and ignore the drug boys out in front of their stores.
Looks like another 7-Eleven location has been revealed
http://detroit.curbed.com/archives/2...f-downtown.php
It's 7/11 so it got me thinking about this. Has anyone heard anything more recent? The location on Cadillac Square they said was supposed to come late summer appears to have absolutely no progress [[it actually looks like there's something else in there still).
Free Slurpees given away today at 7/11 convenience stores nationwide.
They do this every July 11 to honor the Slurpee's birthday.
Fun fact from 7-Eleven History:Quote:
The company's early convenience outlets were known as Tote'm stores because customers "toted" away their purchases, and many stores even sported genuine Alaskan totem poles in front.
In 1946, the Tote'm name changed to 7-Eleven to reflect the stores' new, extended hours - 7 a.m. until 11 p.m., seven days a week.
The downtown Pittsburgh 7-11 is open 6 to 11 on weekdays, and a little later on weekends.
Detroit is notorious for making it difficult for small business to open in a timely fashion. That is because the incompetent Mayor had privatized the building and safety dept. Small businesses had or have to wait on permits, inspectors, etc which usually takes forever.. DEGC openly endorses these businesses but city government behind the scenes makes it difficult for small and midsize businesses to set up shop. Thanks again Dave Bing
I agree. It would make more sense for a 7-11 to be located closer to Campus Martius Park. The last business in that location on Randolph was a cleaners. A reopened Wayne County Building or a new residential or office building on that large surface parking lot along Randolph and Fort could bring in the needed foot traffic to make a 7-11 in that location successful. I don't see it doing well as things stand today.
BTW, the news reports said that the name 7-11 comes from the first store opening on July 11th, not for its store hours.