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  • Starbucks looks to boost minority businesses, train youth in two new locations

    Starbucks is keeping good on its latest national initiative.    The coffee giant said it will open a store in Dallas, in spring 2018, and Trenton, New Jersey, later this year, as part of its program to invest in at least 15 underserved communities across the U.S. by 2018. To date, Starbucks has opened six similar stores, including in Ferguson, Missouri, central Phoenix, and East Baltimore.  
  • Why college towns are brilliant for retail

    Deborah Butler grew up in a college town. More importantly, she watched her family grow one store into a mega-retail-complex in Gainesville, Florida, that keeps on growing. The University of Florida has been very, very good to Butler and her family, and Butler has lots to say about the symbiotic relationship of higher education and retail.  
  • Apple launches new store initiative

    Apple wants to give its shoppers more reasons to visit its stores than to make a purchase or visit the Genius Bar.  
  • REI in gym partnership

    Outdoor retailer REI is setting up shop in a fast-growing gym niche.   REI and Momentum TM Indoor Climbing are launching REI Co-op Climb, which will serve as a hub for climbing gear, programming and events at each of Momentum’s new climbing gyms. Expert instructors from REI’s Outdoor School will help Momentum members and guests gain skills and confidence through gym to crag classes.   
  • Lowe’s employees have a new uniform — a robotic suit

    A home improvement chain is taking a page from science fiction to keep employees safe.   Lowe's and Virginia Tech have joined forces to develop an exosuit — a wearable robotic suit with lift-assist technology — for Lowe's store employees. The lightweight exosuit, which is designed to help employees lift and move product throughout the store more efficiently, and aids against muscle fatigue, is being piloted in Lowe's Christiansburg, Virginia, store.  
  • CSA Talks With RPAI’s Nick Over

    How many American moms would love to see their sons grow up to become accountants or lawyers? Nick Over is both, but he decided to apply his skills and knowledge to the challenging world of real estate. After just two years at RPAI, the 36-year-old Over is steering the company into new avenues as its director of development. Chain Store Age spoke with him recently about his current pet project.

  • Center Stage at SPECS 2017

    Retail and restaurant executives, architects, suppliers and other industry professionals involved in store design/planning, construction and facility management gathered together for Chain Store Age’s 53rd annual SPECS conference.

    The event, held at the Gaylord Palms in Kissimmee, Fla., focused on the evolution and innovation of physical stores in a digital age, and explored industry trends that are transforming how stores are designed, built, operated and maintained.

  • A Tale of Two City Developers

    If you live in a big city, you gauge your age by the changing real estate. As a kid and then as a teenager, I saw Shea Stadium and Giant Stadium being built. Both are now memories. Driving a New York City cab in the early ’80s, I rarely got a fare to Williamsburg and, when I did, I quickly turned around and headed back to Manhattan over the Williamsburg Bridge.

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