![No easy answers for keeping grocery stores in core Saskatoon neighbourhoods, experts say](https://i.cbc.ca/1.6338179.1643907559!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/extra-foods.jpg)
No easy answers for keeping grocery stores in core Saskatoon neighbourhoods, experts say
CBC
The impending closure of Extra Foods on Broadway Avenue in Saskatoon means another neighbourhood will not have a full-service grocery store.
Former City Planner Alan Wallace says the closure is part of a worrying long-term.
"What's at stake here is that a large area of Saskatoon city centre now has no full-service grocery store, and you wonder about the future of some of the other ones that are still existing," Wallace said.
Over the years areas such as City Park, the downtown and Sutherland have lost their grocery stores.
There are still smaller stores on 22nd and 33rd streets, and "you kind of wonder about the future of those stores," Wallace said.
Sugandhi del Canto, co-founder of the City Centre Food Co-operative, is not surprised another grocery store in the core part of the city is closing.
"It's keeping with the general trend that grocery stores want larger tracts of cheaper land. And so that happens when you move further and further out of the city," del Canto said.
"The irony is that those people could live close by, but they still need a car to get there because the street design is such that even if you had a grocery store nearby in a suburb, you couldn't easily walk [to it]."
Wallace said what is different about the closure on Broadway is it's a more affluent neighbourhood.
"In fact, it's growing with the number of new high rises that have sprung up and are planned for the Broadway area," he said. "It was just surprising to me that they would close a store where the future kind of looks bright in this location."
Del Canto said most people like the idea of a nearby grocery store more than they like the actual store.
"Often times when you look at the purchasing habits or purchasing trends within that store, people are buying small items, they're going there when they need bread or something along those lines" said del Canto, adding that type of buying will not sustain a store.
"I'm not saying that that's the case for the Broadway location because there were people for whom that was their main store."
Wallace said that particular store had a tired layout.
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