
Originally Posted by
kbsooner
Spartan,
I feel I need to respond to the anti Walmart comments to let you know there are some positives to their growth. I deal with WM on the construction end daily, and their current expansion plans include taking over a large amount of existing structures and renovating them into smaller WMs, Neighborhood Markets and the new Marketside concept. In fact I would say last year and the current year we will do more renovation projects for WM than new ground up sites by a fairly large margin. We are hitting the coasts hard, where there is a glut of existing retail structures that have sat vacant for many years in 70-80's era strip malls and a surprising amount in urban cores. Once we complete these projects, the strip center or development is typically revitalized with new locally owned stores and growth in the surrounding area that would not have happened without it. I have worked on numerous projects that from the start looked like a bulldozer and a wrecking ball were the better option, but have turned out to be great examples of adaptive reuse of an existing structure. I will agree that WM has its drawbacks on the business side that have been discussed ad naseum on this site, but they do have some positives that need to be highlighted that may not be well known, specifically to those who believe in preservation and moving business back into urban areas in lieu of the 'burbs. Don't get me wrong, I am all for variety of choices as far as grocery, and have personally have switch to Crest from WM to support a local company. Just wanted to point out not everything thing they do is pure evil.
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