Monday, July 13, 2020

Palm Trees, Beach Balls, and Pub Subs - Publix #1688 - Indialantic, FL


     A nice grand opening post is always refreshing, especially with all the turbulence in the retail industry right now. Last summer on MFR, we took a look at a brand new Publix store, so let's keep the tradition alive again this year with another tour of a shiny new Publix. Today we follow the giant inflatable grocery bag to the Brevard County beachside town of Indialantic, for a look at Publix's new small format store design...


Publix #1688
700 North Miramar Avenue, Indialantic, FL - Indialantic Center

     Even with a few rain showers getting in the way, the new Publix in Indialantic, FL opened bright and early on the morning of June 11, 2020. The opening of this new Publix store was a big deal for the small beachside town of Indialantic, marking the return of a grocery store to the city for the first time in 20 years. In 1999, Indialantic's longtime Winn-Dixie moved three miles to the north (and out of the city limits) to a recently vacated Albertsons store, forcing the citizens of Indialantic to drive up to Indian Harbour Beach for their grocery shopping, or cross the causeway to Melbourne on the mainland as their alternative option. All that has changed now, as the new Publix brings grocery shopping to Indialantic once again.


     Being located directly across the street from the beach, Publix chose to design this store with a "beach bungalow" architectural theme. While Publix's interior designs are pretty standard, it's nice to see some variations with the exterior designs to match the local area.


     Since there wasn't much room in Indialantic for a new grocery store (Publix had to demolish two smaller buildings and design a strangely shaped parking lot to fit this store on the land), the new Publix we'll be touring today features the smallest of Publix's six currently active store designs: the 28M. Coming in around 28,000 square feet, while small, Publix still finds a way to pack a decent amount of stuff into their smallest prototype. These small format stores feature the full selection of service departments and a decent selection of regular groceries as well. While Publix has been using the 28M design since the late 1990's, the floor plan of these stores was completely retooled with a new layout a few years ago, leading to what we'll be seeing here today.


     And speaking of that new layout, here it is! Publix included a map of the new store as part of their grand opening circular, so I'm including the map in this post so you all can better visualize the layout. The new 28M design is essentially a shrunken-down version of the larger 49M prototype that made its debut in late 2019. Introductions out of the way, let's head inside and see what this new store is all about:


     Even though Publix did debut a new decor package in late 2019 to coincide with the debut of the new 49M store design, the new decor (called Evergreen) is proving to be a bit elusive to me. Publix's tried and true Classy Market 3.0 is featured throughout the new Indialantic store, still looking just as good now as it did nearly a decade ago when it first made its debut.

     Anyway, pictured above is the store's main entrance, which brings shoppers straight into the produce department. Produce takes up the front right corner of the store, with the deli island and grab and go sections following immediately behind it.


     Like I said, even though this store is half the size of the average Publix, the fresh departments still feel full-size. The grocery aisles seem to be where Publix did most of the product trimming in these smaller stores, removing some of the non-grocery categories and cutting back on the selection of some products.




     For some reason I took a lot of photos of the produce department. Oh well, I guess I'd rather have too many photos than hardly any at all!


     After produce, we begin to transition into the deli and prepared foods department. Pictured here is the new Publix "Grab & Go" section, which features a variety of ready-to-eat and ready-to-heat foods. While 90% of what's featured in the Grab & Go section are products Publix has sold for years, these new sections take all those products and streamline them into one convenient cooler, rather than scattering these products in a few different coolers throughout the store.


     Panning to the right from the Grab & Go coolers, we find the deli island. The island in this store is essentially identical to the deli island in a 49M store, the only major difference being the small stores have the location of the produce department and the deli island reversed from the larger design.


     The front of the deli island is home to the Pub Sub counter, a great place to go for a snack on the beach or after the beach (or anytime really).


     While the Pub Sub station is located on the front of the island, the left side is home to the deli counter, the right side is hot foods, and the back is home to the gourmet cheese case.


     After produce, the right side wall becomes home to the meat coolers, with the service meat and seafood counter located in the back corner behind the deli island.


     Making our way into the back corner, here's a look toward the seafood portion of the service counter.


     Finishing up in the fresh departments, here's one last look toward the meat and seafood counters, followed by one last look at the Grab & Go aisle looking toward the front of the store:



     While it's not as large or fancy as a mezzanine level dining area, Publix did include a small seating area in this sunny nook located next to the store's main entrance. However, due to the pandemic, the seating area was blocked off, so this area has never officially been opened yet.


     Moving on to the grocery aisles, here's a look across the store's front end. Visible here is the back of the service desk, with the registers located just beyond that. While this store is about as wide as a typical Publix, it's not a very deep building. The grocery aisles are really short, which we'll see in the next photo:


      The short grocery aisles are where this store really begins to show off it's rather compact size. The older 28M store design (which I've yet to post on either blog) chose more normal length grocery aisles and more compact service departments over the modern design, which is essentially the opposite in concept. Since the fresh departments are getting a larger emphasis in grocery stores these days, it makes sense Publix would want to put more emphasis on those now compared to the older design, where all the service departments were essentially shoved into aisle 1.


     The back wall of the store is home to the dairy department, with the bakery visible in the distance here.


     Some more center store action to come in the following photos, as we make our way toward the bakery in the back left corner of the store:




     For one of Publix's most prized departments, the bakery seems so lonely all by itself in the back left corner. Even the new 49M stores have the bakery back here, which seems weird to me, as the bakery would fit in much better in the "grand aisle" Publix was going for over by the deli island.



     Wine in aisle 9, followed by frozen foods in aisles 10 and 11, the last two aisles in the store.


     Here's a look down the first frozen foods aisle, but let's make a pit stop at the bakery before moving on to the second aisle of frozen foods...


     Emerging from aisle 10, the bakery department follows dairy along the back wall. While all by itself in this small store, the full selection of Publix bakery products could still be purchased here.


     There wasn't much room for table displays back here, so the bakery had to make use of some shelves along the wall to store all of the baked goods on.



     A fresh tray of Publix's chocolate chip cookies had just come out the oven as I passed by the bakery, and was set in this little display window where you could see the baker taking the cookies off the tray and packaging them in the plastic containers. I thought this window was a neat touch, as you got to see all the baked goods as they came straight from the oven (and after staring at this picture for too long writing about cookies, I want one now, and the presence of those donuts in the photo isn't helping me either!🍪🍩).


     The temptation of sweets aside, we'll leave the bakery behind us and move into the last aisle of the store, home to the remainder of frozen foods.


     Leaving frozen foods, we find the pharmacy located in the front left corner of the building. Due to the store's size, the pharmacy feels a bit cramped here, which is one of the only flaws in the new 28M design.


     Here's one last interior photo, looking across the front end (on grand opening morning - which explains the huge crowd!). However, it doesn't need to be a grand opening for a Publix to look like this. At most Publix stores, the sight you see here is called "Saturday afternoon". At Winn-Dixie, they call this sight a "mirage" 😁


     Stepping outside, here's one last look at the exterior of the new Indialantic Publix store, looking at the store's entire width. It's a nice little store, and a nice place for both locals and beach-goers alike to shop at.


     Looking at the left side of the building, this is probably my best photo at showing how this store isn't very deep at all. There aren't any satellite images available of the new Publix site yet, but it's rather impressive how they were able to shove this new store onto the tiny little lot they were given. Due to the strange shape of the lot, most of the store's parking is located on the side of the building, as the front of the new store comes really close to the main road out front.


     And speaking of the main road, here it is, with beach parking visible on the other side. With a Pub Sub and a beach umbrella in hand, you're all set for a typical day in Florida after you visit the new Indialantic Publix!

     While the Indialantic Publix is Breavrd's only new Publix in the works at the moment, later this year Brevard will be getting not one but two new Winn-Dixie stores, so the grand openings will keep on coming! It's refreshing to see some new stores on the horizon, especially with all the closure waves and bankruptcies that keep making the news.

Anyway, that's all I have for now. So until the next post,

AFB

5 comments:

  1. The interior of this new Publix may not be anything special, but it doesn't look hideous either like so many newer retail establishments. So, yeah, that's a compliment, lol. I certainly like it better than the GreenWise we saw on the AFB a few weeks ago. I've seen smaller format grocery stores with more compromises than this (HEB Pantry Foods comes to mind) so I think Publix did a pretty good job here.

    The exterior of this store is more interesting. I like the "beach bungalow" architecture and colors. The colors especially look appropriate for this location. It's great to see a new retail building with things like pastel colors instead of the ridiculously cookie cutter and out of place industrial look that so many others are using these days.

    Some of these smaller stores have cramped checkout areas to begin with. Add pandemic era social distancing to the mix and the front of these stores become a real maze. It almost becomes impossible to shop the store using the front corridor. Since it seems that this store has one-way aisles, I suppose it's necessary to use the front corridor when going from aisle to aisle. It'll be interesting to see if/how retailers reduce these long, spaced out queues at the front of the store if social distancing is here to stay for a while.

    The parking lot of this store, at least from what I can tell from the photos, seems a bit strange to me. I don't know if this is common in Florida or if this was done because of the shortage of land, but it seems strange to me that they would have a row of parking spots across the front of the store where drivers would have to back into the space where all the shoppers enter/exit the store. It seems that there could be some added potential for pedestrians to get hit by a backing car using with that design, but maybe not. It's hard to tell. It probably goes without saying that this store may have more senior shoppers than the typical grocery store and so that might be some added potential for parking lot mayhem. Perhaps the situation isn't as bad as it looks in the photos though.

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    1. Publix hasn't ever had an interior I ever found hideous, as it seems like no matter what they do, it will look nice! GreenWise is clearly trying to look and feel trendier than a traditional Publix store, while the namesake stores keep things looking and feeling more traditional. For its size, the store is quite complete, and you could certainly do a full shopping trip here!

      While Publix has generic exterior designs they'll use, it's nice to see they'll do something more unique when the conditions call for it. Indialantic doesn't have any architectural design codes, so Publix chose to do something unique all on their own. This store fits the community well.

      Yes, Publix is doing one-way aisles. However, Publix usually has plenty of cashiers and staff to keep lines from backing up too much into the front aisle, which helps prevent that aisle from crowding too bad. I actually thought the one-way aisle thing would make photographing these stores more complicated (limiting places where I can sneak a photo), but it really hasn't.

      The parking lot here is strange, but that's due to the lot being oddly shaped. There's that single lane across the front of the building, with the larger lot on the side. Both times I've been to this store, I parked in the larger lot on the side of the building so I didn't have to deal with the cramped conditions at the front of the building. There's quite a bit of foot traffic going toward the parking spaces at the front of the store, so I can see there being some complications for pedestrians there.

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  2. I know you had been hoping to encounter the new Evergreen décor, but I have to echo what you say in the post -- CM3.0 still looks really good here! And you got to finally photograph that giant inflatable shopping basket too, so not all is lost :)

    I was really worried the small format meant there wasn't a bakery here! Apparently I missed that part on the directory, and once we passed the grand aisle with no sign of one, I was convinced for a hot minute that Publix thought that department was expendable. I was relieved to finally see it tucked away in the opposite corner of the store, haha! I've heard of plenty of stores, especially on The Market Report and The Independent Edition, that don't actually bake in store, but still, most have some sort of bread department besides just sandwich bread. So it's good to see Publix didn't cut the bakery out after all, even if its placement in the salesfloor really does seem confusing.

    Also, those desserts at the bakery sure look good! I thought you liked Albertsons chocolate chip cookies the best, though? ;P I haven't tried either type, sadly -- feel free to send some my way, haha XD (Doesn't have to be cookies, could be the donuts instead -- I'm not picky, lol!)

    Has that frozen foods décor been seen in other Publix stores before? Maybe it's just this angle, but I'm getting a vibe from it that's kinda similar to an abstract interpretation of Kroger's 2012 décor frozen foods paint color and stencils. And lol at the Winn-Dixie joke!

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    1. Any new Publix store location will have the necessities of Bakery, Customer Service, Deli, Grocery, Meat/Seafood, Pharmacy, and Produce/Floral. It works for 28m (28,000 square feet) stores to 48.3m (48,387 square feet) stores.

      New Publix store locations that have opened has Bakery and Deli in opposite corners of the store, and Deli being an island distant from its prep room.

      The 28m stretched stores are nice. I think one will be in development in Chattanooga, Tennessee (i.e. Publix #1731).

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    2. The last Publix grand opening I went to (in New Smyrna) had the bag in a really hard to photograph spot between the road and some trees, so at least I got to redeem myself for that one!

      I've never seen a modern Publix lacking any of the major "grand aisle" service departments before, and there's no way they'd leave out a bakery - one of their most famous departments! At least I'm not the only one who thinks the placement of the bakery is a bit strange here. It certainly would have been more at home in the grand aisle, but at least it's accounted for!

      Albertsons chocolate chip cookies will always be the best - but these days it's either drive to Louisiana for those or settle for Publix's! Publix's chocolate chip cookies are good though, and are a perfectly suitable replacement for Albertsons' cookies, but Albertsons' cookies will always be a nostalgic memory for me. And I'll have to remember to assemble a Publix bakery care package for someone, although I don't know how well donuts ship! :)

      As for the frozen foods decor piece, now that you mention it (and I look through some other photos), I can't find another example of it. Besides in the early 2000's stores, Publix usually places frozen foods away from a side wall in some manner, so they rarely have any opportunity to put up any frozen foods decorations. So I guess that abstract blue piece is a bit unique!

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