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TOUR: Price Chopper - Quinsig Village, Worcester, MA

Price Chopper
Opened: 1997
Previous Tenants: Hodes Super Market (was open in 1975) > Big D Supermarkets (??-1995?) in neighboring building
Location: 564 Southwest Cutoff, Quinsigamond Village, Worcester, MA
Photographed: October 12, 2019
It's time for our first official store tour here in Worcester this time around! We're starting in the far southeastern corner of the city, and you can get an idea on the map above -- this store is on route 20 below Quinsigamond Village. I don't know the store's history in too much detail, and that confusion is complicated by the fact that this store has had several addresses over the years. It's been listed as both Arnold Road in Auburn and Southwest Cutoff in Worcester, although it looks like the original supermarket in this location was constructed between 1960 and 1966 by Hodes, a local chain eventually acquired by Big D, at what's now 2 Washington Street in Auburn just next to this building. That building is roughly 18,000 square feet and has a pitched roof, along with some cool brick details that probably date back to its construction. At some point, Hodes became Big D, which Price Chopper acquired in 1995. Almost immediately, this store was constructed, and it was open in 1997.
The store totals around 53,000 square feet, although it feels a little on the small side because it's not set up to have a grand aisle. In fact, its similarity to other acquired Big D stores and distinct lack of layout similarity to new-build Price Choppers makes me think that Big D may have been planning or even begun construction of this store when Price Chopper acquired the chain.
We enter to the right side of the store with produce in the first aisle on the right side of the store. Seafood is in the back right corner of the store, with meats on the back wall. Frozen and dairy are on the right side of the store, and deli, prepared foods, and bakery are in the last aisle. That's such an atypical layout for Price Chopper that I have to assume Big D planned this store. Plus, Price Chopper didn't finalize its acquisition of Big D until very late 1995, and it would be an awfully fast timeline to begin from scratch to build a new store in late 1995 or early 1996, then have it fully up and running by 1997.
This store has not aged particularly well, although I believe it was renovated once since it opened. It's not in bad shape, but it's showing signs of age with some fixtures looking a bit dated but more obviously noticeable, several letters missing from the signs around the store.
But it's definitely a full-service store, and the service departments are all up and running here, something other MA Price Choppers seem to struggle with. There's no pharmacy here, as there's a Walgreens (formerly Brooks and Rite Aid) in the same strip mall next door.
A look across the back wall...
The grocery aisles are pretty typical for Price Chopper. They're clean and spacious, but not particularly exciting.
The freezer cases look pretty old, although they seem to be in good repair. I assume they date back to the store's 1997 opening.
Cold cuts transitions to dairy in the back left corner. I believe dairy continues down one of the grocery aisles at the end here, but I don't seem to have a picture of that.
The deli is on the side wall of the store, in the back left corner. Minor maintenance things like the one burnt out light here make the store look older and dingier than it is, too.
Sorry for the terrible picture, but a functional prepared foods and coffee bar area is up next on the side wall of the store, with a very pleasant cafe area in the middle.
This section extends out to the side wall of the store, and you can see the emergency exit in the back. This is a really well-designed area!
Then we move through some sale items to bakery on the front wall...
The bakery is on the front wall, and then we move into the front-end taking up the rest of the front wall...
We'll see a few small independent stores here in Quinsigamond Village, but for our next post we're headed up to South Worcester -- if you're looking at the map in my graphic, that'll be right where 290 and 146 intersect. Come back tomorrow to check it out!

Comments

  1. Great store tour! I've always been fascinated with Price Chopper. Are the prices in fact chopped or are they just regular? I kinda know the answer, I just find it an odd name for a supermarket that is, in fact, not a discount store. I used to get so confused with A&P's Sav-a-centers. Were the prices cheaper? I never knew if they were or not.

    Not my favorite décor, that's for sure. It's a little overkill in produce. And I kinda hate when stores name their departments something that seem to refer to something else but not really. Like "Central Market Florist". Where is this Central Market you speak of? Can I go there for my flowers instead of here? It's like when Pathmark started calling their bakeries "Chelsea Bakers". I highly doubt any of their bakers were from Chelsea.

    I always find it pretty hilarious when letters go missing from the walls. I mean do employees fine them on the floor and say "hey boss, this H fell off the wall" and the manager says "ah throw it away, we don't need it." It just baffles me.

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    1. Thanks! Prices are decidedly not chopped -- at least going by the stores in Main South Worcester, which I knew best, Price Chopper was always by far the most expensive, usually followed by Shaw's and then Big Y, although those last two switched back and forth a few times.

      Central Market is actually the name of Price Chopper before it was Price Chopper! The first opened in 1932, hence the rebrand as Market 32.
      https://mdaquest.org/a-family-legacy-of-philanthropy-shapes-price-chopper-market-32s-commitment-to-community/

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  2. Again, I have to disagree with Big D having anything to do with this store's layout. There do exist many of stores built as Price Chopper that have bakery and deli on the opposite end of the store from the grand aisle, and whose layout has a tendency to survive major remodels. This one kind of looks like a flipped version of #161 in Norwich, NY, minus the frozen, seasonal, and dairy gondolas splitting the back corridor and using the c. 2007-2012 decor package.

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    Replies
    1. Makes sense. I'll look at those other stores. It wasn't a PC layout I was too familiar with.

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