There’s no doubt that the pandemic has changed the way we grocery shop. For some, ordering both perishable and non perishable items online has become the way to go. Perhaps you’re a big fan of Amazon subscribe and save. If you do go to the grocery store, you’d best be prepared to play hide and seek with the items on your list. In fact, if you really want to know where to find something, ask the nearest employee pushing an online ordering cart in front of them. Personal shoppers are now a staple of the grocery industry and chances are, they’ve already had to seek and find everything you’d ever want to locate!

Nowadays, local Los Alamos grocery shopping is limited to either the Smith’s in White Rock, or the one in Los Alamos. Our Los Alamos Smith’s has been expanded to include retail that resembles a super Walmart, which is actually a pretty nice perk. But if you haven’t been in the area for long, you might be surprised to discover that there used to be more than one grocery store chain in town.

Piggly Wiggly

Before the Black Hole or the current plans for beautiful new housing at Arkansas Place, there was a grocery store. If any of you can remember exactly when this market opened, please feel free to comment. If asked, most long time residents who recall the Piggly Wiggly at 4015 Arkansas Avenue can’t actually remember it not being there. Some folks called it the Tom & Jerry Market because of the mural painted on the Arkansas facing side of the building depicting the famous cartoon cat and mouse. It’s possible that the store was operated independently for a short time after Piggly Wiggly pulled the franchise, but that hasn’t been confirmed. Whatever its name, the grocery store was still around in the 80’s before closing and eventually becoming the Black Hole. If you live at that “end” of town, you can imagine just how handy it was to have a small grocery store option in the area.

Ed’s Market

If you ask Yelp, Ed’s Food Market at 1183 Diamond Drive is still open for business. Considering the space is primarily occupied by Gracie Barra Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and Los Alamos Social Services, you’re probably not going to be able to swing by for a gallon of milk after work. Not long after the Smith’s Marketplace opened, Ed’s Food Market closed its doors. Back when the store was still operating, it certainly made a handy place for high schoolers to pool their funds and pick up snacks or meals. The mom and pop grocery store was owned and operated by a local Los Alamos family, the Kindsfathers. With kids in the local school district playing sports and participating in activities, Ed’s was a great example of a small business involved in the community.

Safeway

Before the big Smith’s Marketplace, the “main” grocery chain in Los Alamos was located over in the MariMac Plaza. The space is vacant now, although it is still owned by Kroger. Most of us are marginally aware of this as it becomes a hot topic off and on in regards to what amenities might possibly go into the enormous space.

Back in the early days of the Mari Mac Plaza when Revco and TG&Y occupied the other storefronts, more about that HERE, the grocery store anchor was Safeway. Sometime in the nineties the store was absorbed into the Furr’s Supermarket chain before Kroger took the store in hand and opened the second Smith’s in Los Alamos County. Interestingly enough, even while the store in Los Alamos was changing names, signage, and being remodeled, the White Rock Smith’s was pretty much exactly as it is today.

Los Alamos now hosts both the Co-op Market and Natural Grocers along with Smith’s. When we’re bemoaning the loss of some of our smaller grocery options, it’s important to remember that our small town isn’t the only one going through these ups and downs with the merchandise industry. Towns all over America are changing with the times. Perhaps its time for all of us to get involved at the local level and get excited about things to come! And when you’re ready to talk Real Estate in Los Alamos, give me a call. I’m your hometown real estate broker!