Philadelphia’s latest Grocery Outlet, a full-service discount chain, is part of a sweeping neighborhood revitalization plan dreamed up by the Philadelphia Housing Authority.
Six years after demolishing a pair of public housing high-rises, Sharswood, one of the most disadvantaged parts of the city, is taking on a new shape. The agency has built more than 600 units of housing, reopened a shuttered high school, relocated its headquarters, and opened a mixed-use shopping center dubbed Sharswood Ridge.
The Grocery Outlet is the center’s anchor tenant.
“We delivered on the thing the community wanted most. That we were able to do this is, I think, probably the most meaningful thing,” said PHA president Kelvin Jeremiah, who was downright giddy during a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the new supermarket.
By the end of this year, the supermarket will be joined by an urgent care facility, a Santander Bank branch, an Italian deli, and a barbecue restaurant.
The area in and around the $52 million shopping center will also be home to 98 apartments. Most of them are market-rate.