My wife got tired of having to go to a secondary store due to LoblAws MLG not having so many things that she just stopped shopping there. It’s crazy how they will be out of essential products you would expect to see at every grocer. That store has lost its lustre.
As noted about WF above in a different context, it's amazing how grocers w/deep pockets and research teams don't stay invested in their great ideas.
In the case of MLG, when it started they not only had great ambitions, but a Loblaws VP who made the store its own 'region' with wide ranging flexibility not open to other stores in the chain to bring in off-list vendors and to fix things outside the normal rules.
That has has largely changed.
It doesn't help matters, in its own odd way, that the store is making money hand over fist no matter how little attention they pay to it.
When they started, their chef program was overseen by the executive chef to the Weston family who again had great ambitions.
He has moved on.......and the product is stagnating or sliding backwards, totally apart from the essentials question.
Of course, that is partly because of the phenomenal area growth, and relatively little competition.
Metro College Park is now mostly renovated I think, but last I saw had not undergone a desperately needed expansion.
Neither Sobeys, nor Longos have full-size stores nearby.
I have a good handle on where grocery is going in, and I haven't heard of anything full-size coming to the College/Carlton/Yonge zone anytime soon.
Suffice to say, for the time being, the capacity of grocery in downtown is almost fully taxed.
At current growth rates of population and jobs, you're looking at literally 10 more full-line super markets in DT over the next decade and a half.
Failures will be limited to very poor execution, and good spaces will be picked off by competitors if that happens.