Friday Night Rewind It doesn't matter which team you cheer for. We've got video previews of every high school football program in Hillsborough, Pinellas, Pasco and Hernando County.
Publix employee Derrick Glover sweeps in front of the new Treasure Island store, which opens today.
[WILLIE J. ALLEN JR. | Times]
[WILLIE J. ALLEN JR. | Times]
Publix GreenWise section is integrated in the Treasure Island store, which sits atop a parking garage. A Boca Ciega Bay dock is planned for customers arriving by boat.
TREASURE ISLAND — For this store opening, Publix Super Markets will post clerks outside to guide shoppers to the parking garage and elevators that take them upstairs to the store.
"Until they're familiar with the layout, customers may need help finding their way in," said Shannon Patten, spokeswoman for the Lakeland grocer that opens its first of many multilevel stores in Central Florida today.
Almost as tall as a five-story building, the huge gray hulk looked like a battleship bearing down on Gulf Boulevard until architects added fake windows, gables and other visual tricks. An elevated outdoor patio will have a Subway and umbrella-shaded tables. A Starbucks also was planned until the coffee giant cut back store growth.
"All those features break up that huge surface area so the building blends into the neighborhood," said Lisa Brennaman of the design team at Cuhachi and Peterson in Orlando.
Publix has similar stores under construction in the Tampa Bay area in St. Petersburg's Tyrone area and a Publix GreenWise Natural Market in South Tampa. Unlike Treasure Island, which uses four elevators to link shoppers with their cars, they rely on escalators: one for shoppers and a parallel one for carts.
Vertical supermarkets are not exactly new. Publix built more than a dozen like this one in the past decade on postage stamp lots in congested urban locations in Atlanta and Miami-Dade County. There's an upstairs Target in Tampa accessible from a two-story garage. But such multifloor stores are making a comeback now that city planners favor dense, mixed-use development and other big-city building tactics abandoned in the post-World War II rush to the suburbs.
For Publix, which developed a small-store footprint in the 1990s to shoehorn stores into heavily populated urban locations, the half-pint, 28,000-square-foot store became a key component in a strategy that puts stores near where people live.
It's been a fight. Voters in Indian Rocks Beach killed one planned as part of a luxury condo in 2006. A similar project in St. Pete Beach was blocked in court by antigrowth forces despite citywide voter approval.
Combined with Publix's pending purchase of 49 Albertsons in Florida, the new and replacement stores will increase Publix penetration in southwest Pinellas from eight to 13 supermarkets by 2009. Sweetbay and Winn-Dixie have four each.
Sticking a Publix above a 125-space parking garage doubles the utility of 2 acres of pricey beach land. To comply with federal flood insurance rules, Publix could not build an occupied first floor close to sea level, which meant operational changes. Deliveries are lifted by freight elevators. Refuse drops down a chute to an enclosed compactor. A generator big enough to keep the store open in power outages is hidden on the roof.
Parking could get dicey. The store employs 110 and has 160 total parking spaces. Until the opening crowds thin out, employees will be bused in from a rented lot a mile away. Conflicts could flare over free lots at a county beach access and city park across the street.
The store is across Gulf Boulevard from the beach, so customers get a gulf view while waiting at the registers. The best view, however, is from a third floor hallway that serves offices and break rooms.
In addition to a bus shelter and bike rack, Publix will build a Boca Ciega Bay dock for customers arriving by boat.
Mark Albright can be reached at albright@sptimes.com or (727) 893-8252.
>>FAST FACTS
Going vertical
Why a multilevel Publix in Treasure Island?
Building a Publix above a parking garage doubles the utility of pricey beach land.
Are multilevel stores a new concept?
Publix has built more than a dozen in the past decade in places such as Atlanta and Miami-Dade County. Multilevel stores are making a comeback now that city planners favor dense, mixed-use development.
Is Publix planning more?
Yes. Publix has similar stores under construction in the Tampa Bay area in St. Petersburg's Tyrone area and a Publix GreenWise Natural Market in South Tampa.
[Last modified: Sep 02, 2008 03:02 PM]
Comments on this article
by Wut?
Sep 2, 2008 3:02 PM
Unbelievable: Why are you lying? Publix has not cut any benefits, they only added a life insurance option for their employees. What benefits of yours have been cut? It is deducted from your paycheck, all associates pay in to the insurance pool...
by GameOver
Aug 31, 2008 6:38 PM
SPB Resident.I like SPB but it is really looking worn down, I agree MadBch is not much better. Overall our coastal areas are far less attractive than many around the state/country. Just a fact of life, mainly due to the people who hate any changes
by SPB Proud Resident
Aug 30, 2008 2:31 PM
St. Pete Beach is not the armpit of the gulf, GameOver, Mad Beach is.
by Mike
Aug 29, 2008 4:57 PM
This is what should be done even in the burbs to save space, there's no need for massive parking lots. Build on top of garages. I love the Walters Crossing Target in Tampa, it's great.
by Luba
Aug 29, 2008 4:13 PM
Thank You Publix! More free sample ladies so we can gorge while shopping and get a "freebie" lunch!
by jeanne
Aug 29, 2008 4:10 PM
what a dumb picture!! It looks great. Can't wait to shop there today. To SPB and TI this is the first positvie in years. The same bunch is messing up SPB as did TI in the last 10 years. They want their private islnad go to the Keys and sit one
by Dale
Aug 29, 2008 3:49 PM
Clearly, there is always fear of change,
and the unknown and unfamiliar are often enemies of those resistant to change.
Clafication:When you could get all the aforementioned deals, wages were much lower!
"I remembuh da days of duh kwattuh lunch!"
by Amy
Aug 29, 2008 3:20 PM
I shopped Topps too but will welcome a nice new Publix, even though they're a little pricey. Teasure Island, Sunset Beach....it's Heaven on Earth. We're so lucky!!!
by Mike
Aug 29, 2008 6:03 AM
How do you not have a photo of the outside of the building when you're pimping a two-story Publix? C'mon, Slant Pete!
by Isle of Capri
Aug 29, 2008 6:03 AM
Spencer, I am right there with you, grew up in T.I. and you couldn't beat the dollar deal at Russo's Pizza....miss those simple days when 5 bucks could feed you and buy you some time at the Supper Mario game.
by GameOver
Aug 28, 2008 8:02 PM
Visited the store, it's beautiful! With all the neat/unique features I wonder why a picture of the t-shirts? Also, St Pete beach, keep letting your city run down and become the armpit of the gulf coast, Im sure other places will take the lost tourism
by Greg
Aug 28, 2008 5:12 PM
I'm driving up there Saturday to watch the confused Seniors trying to figure out what floor they're on.
by Sharon
Aug 28, 2008 5:10 PM
Hey Tom, it's Publix. If they run out of a sale item, go to the customer service desk and get a rain check!
by Hopeful in St Pete Beach
Aug 28, 2008 4:03 PM
Hopefully St Pete Beach will take a cue from these beach communities and FINALLY allow our beach to develop thus attracting more tourists! Noone visits us b/c the hotels are OLD and there is NOTHING to do there! Be gone CRG!
by Kyle
Aug 28, 2008 2:39 PM
Ada Girl Kim.I was thinking the same thing!
by Jessica
Aug 28, 2008 2:26 PM
EVeryone keeps complaining about corporate spending, just like you Unbelievable. Yes, right now the economy is bad, but it will get better, and at least they are creating jobs. You have to fight the downward trend if you want to see it turn around
by TIresident
Aug 28, 2008 2:25 PM
Obviously unbelievable is not a TI resident. We have been wait for a grocery store to return to our island. The new store will save gas and time since the closest stores were in SPB and Mad Beach. Leaving the cars at home and ride your bikes.
by Spencer
Aug 28, 2008 2:24 PM
Anyone else miss the old Treasure Island Fun Center that used to be on the site? Long live the Dollar Deal (slice of pizza and a drink for $1)!
by publix
Aug 28, 2008 2:14 PM
The store employs 110 and has 160 total parking spaces. - they make it sound like there's only going to be 50 available spaces. the publix employees aren't all going to be at work at the same time!
by Duh
Aug 28, 2008 10:56 AM
Hey Unbelievable, something like this doesn't get built overnight. I've seen this building going up for at least a year now. What were they supposed to do, leave a half built building because the economy is tanking?
by Unbelievable
Aug 28, 2008 9:55 AM
At a time when employees hours & benefits are being reduced due to what Publix Management calls "losing revenue" they go building something like this. Go ahead and expand, but don't treat people like idiots by saying that the co. doesn't have money.
by mark
Aug 28, 2008 9:55 AM
I still miss the old Topps grocery - and their prices. Oh well!
by tom
Aug 28, 2008 9:14 AM
Another store opens and I'll bet the second day they run out of sale items
by Jay
Aug 28, 2008 9:14 AM
Thank you Publix, TI needed a store like this for too long; this exceeds our expectations. Very Happy to shop at Publix home and away!
by Kim
Aug 28, 2008 9:14 AM
Why such a crappy picture to show off the new store?
Subscribe to the Times
Click here for daily delivery
of the St. Petersburg Times.