Chicago Sun-Times

TREASURE ISLAND TO CLOSE

Chicago grocery chain, once called ‘America’s most European supermarke­t,’ to shut down after 55 years

- BY RACHEL HINTON, STAFF REPORTER rhinton@suntimes.com | @rrhinton

The longtime family-owned Chicago grocery chain Treasure Island Foods informed employees last week that it will permanentl­y shut down its six remaining locations next month.

“As you have recently found out, we made the very difficult decision to wind down operations as a company,” Treasure Island CEO and president Maria Kamberos said in a note sent to workers on Wednesday.

“We are sorry it has had to come to this point and we know how detrimenta­l this is to each and every one of you and your families. We have done everything we could to attempt to get the company on solid ground to try to operate for another 55 years,” Kamberos said in the note, which was shared on social media. “Unfortunat­ely, given the current industry conditions, it has been impossible for us to continue to operate without losing money.”

Managers at several Treasure Island locations referred questions to the company’s corporate officers, who did not respond to requests for comment on Saturday.

A representa­tive from the Streetervi­lle location said the chain would shut down Oct. 12, according to The Chicago Maroon, the University of Chicago’s student newspaper which first reported Treasure Island’s pending closure. Prices on remaining inventory at the Hyde Park location were slated to be cut in half.

In addition to the Streetervi­lle and Hyde Park stores, Treasure Island has anchored locations in Lake View, Gold Coast, Old Town and Wilmette. Their Lincoln Park operation went out of business earlier this month, and the company recently had apparently pulled out of a planned location at an Uptown developmen­t.

Founder Christ Kamberos was born on the West Side to Greek immigrants, and his father sold produce out of a cart, sparking an interest in the grocery business that never waned, according to a Chicago SunTimes obituary following his death in 2009 at age 83.

Christ Kamberos opened the first Treasure Island Foods store on Broadway near Cornelia with his brothers in 1963, building up the chain’s reputation by traveling the world to bring unusual organic produce to Chicagoans.

The Sun-Times obituary noted that legendary celebrity chef Julia Child once described his family’s store as “America’s most European supermarke­t.”

Kamberos was remembered as a curious innovator always on the lookout for the next big thing in food, though he didn’t always succeed. Organic produce wasn’t a hit when he introduced it in the 1970s.

“We were ready, but the people were not,” the chain’s vice president of operations Lee Zarras said in 2009. Organic produce “didn’t look as good as the convention­al stuff.”

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILES ?? A shopper checks out at Treasure Island’s Broadway location in May 1969.
SUN-TIMES FILES A shopper checks out at Treasure Island’s Broadway location in May 1969.

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