Quote:
Originally Posted by BTinSF
This is precisely what has me wondering about that location. It's just not a place very many people are likely to walk to. There are residents of The Sutterfield, of course and a few surrounding condos like, I suppose, yours, but that's not so many people. The old "Dime Stores" were invariably at busy downtown locations like the Woolworths next to the Powell/Market cable car turnaround--lots of foot traffic--or, after WW II, sometimes in strip centers with other shopping to attract people.
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I wouldn't be so sure about the not so many people within close walking distance. I believe Cathedral Hill has one of the highest population densities in town. Daniel Burnham Court, and other tall condos have large number of residents. It is a bedroom community, but convenience stores do well in bedroom communities . (I would get back to my old theme, that residential highrises do not generate a pedestrian friendly streetscape, but it would be off topic, and for now, we'll agree to blame this on highrises designed without consideration for street life).
Also, we have a very large number of seniors: not just the Sutterfield, but the older building next to it (I forget its name), the Sequoias, St Mark's Tower, the Carlisle, the Avenue, the San Francisco Towers. Many of them are not much on the streets around here, in part because they are frail, but also because there's not much street life, and they probably do not care much for what's offered in trendy stores anyway. 99cents Only views them as an ideal clientele: they like the low prices and the no-nonsense nature of the offerings.