While Village and RoNetco operate a decent number of vintage supermarkets, Saker ShopRites, Inc. is extremely aggressive about replacing its older stores. Most of their locations have a very cookie-cutter appearance--and not in a good way--with exteriors I find unattractive and interiors that have ugly exposed ceilings. (I do not think that exposed ceilings are always ugly, though I usually hate it when the HVAC units are visible, as I find that to be too much sensory overload.)
Saker is currently the largest operator of ShopRite supermarkets. Although I do not know when the Saker Family began operating grocery stores, Foodarama (the company run by the Sakers) joined the Wakefern cooperative no later than 1956:
https://www.newspapers.com/article/the- ... 145789320/
In 2006, the Saker Family assumed near-total control of Foodarama (taking the company private in the process) and subsequently renamed the business Saker ShopRites, Inc.:
https://www.newspapers.com/article/asbu ... 145786601/
https://www.newspapers.com/article/asbu ... 145786646/
(Note that the above article incorrectly states that Foodrama was founded in 1958. Also, it is possible that the Sakers now have 100% control of the company.)
The next ShopRite I am going to discuss was not initially a Foodrama supermarket. The specific store to which I am referring is the longtime ShopRite at 1801 Route 35 in Belmar, NJ (in Monmouth County):
https://www.marketreportblog.com/2021/0 ... ar-nj.html
This supermarket was erroneously believed to have started out as a Penn Fruit location. As it turns out, despite the fact that the building looks identical to the stores Penn Fruit was building, this supermarket was always a ShopRite and was always planned to be a ShopRite:
https://www.newspapers.com/article/asbu ... 144501228/
On February 26, 1964, Maurice Holtzman opened the ShopRite of Belmar-Wall (as it was called back then):
https://www.newspapers.com/article/asbu ... 144500955/
https://www.newspapers.com/article/asbu ... 144501054/
https://www.newspapers.com/article/asbu ... 144501086/
Here is how the supermarket looked when it was brand new:
https://www.newspapers.com/article/the- ... 144500676/
https://www.newspapers.com/article/the- ... 145878036/
According to this article, the ShopRite of Belmar was acquired by Foodarama in May 1966, when Mr. Holtzman joined that company:
https://www.newspapers.com/article/asbu ... 145787388/
I was unable to ascertain when most the windows of this supermarket were unfortunately covered up.
The old Belmar ShopRite--which to be honest, was not in the best shape--finally closed on May 18, 2021. The following day, Saker opened one of its cookie-cutter, "World Class" stores as a replacement (located diagonally across the street from the old ShopRite):
https://www.google.com/maps/@40.1699114 ... &entry=ttu
https://www.newspapers.com/article/the- ... 145782719/
https://www.newspapers.com/article/the- ... 145783298/
The former ShopRite building remains vacant. I believe that there was some speculation (or more accurately, wishful thinking) that Saker would convert that building into another Dearborn Market. (Dearborn Market currently has only one location--in Holmdel, NJ--which Saker acquired in 2015. In contrast to so many Saker ShopRites, the Holmdel Dearborn Market is housed in a very attractive and old-fashioned building.)