The Arizona Republic

Fry’s opens in downtown

- Russ Wiles Arizona Republic USA TODAY NETWORK

Downtown Phoenix gets its first supermarke­t today when Fry’s opens at First Street and Jefferson.

Andy Lucich has lived in downtown Phoenix for almost a decade and has worked in the area for the past five years. He didn’t always own a car during that time, which created problems.

“One of the biggest challenges was getting groceries,” he said. “I sometimes had to call Uber if getting a large order or I had to take light rail.”

Some of those challenges will disappear when downtown’s first supermarke­t opens at First Street and Jefferson, just north of Talking Stick Resort Arena.

Many downtown workers, and especially residents, can’t wait for the Fry’s ribbon-cutting today at 7:30 a.m., with the store opening at 8 a.m.

“Most of the people in my building are excited and will be there when it opens,” said Nickie Casciaro, a bookkeeper and accountant who lives at the Orpheum Lofts a couple of blocks away. “I want to make sure I have a front-row view of the ribbon-cutting.” Critical to area’s developmen­t

The lack of a supermarke­t long has been viewed as an impediment to developmen­t downtown, despite the prevalence of jobs, restaurant­s, sporting events and cultural amenities such as museums.

“A grocery store is part of the infrastruc­ture of a (developed) urban neighborho­od,” said Dan Klocke, executive director of the Downtown Phoenix Partnershi­p and head of the group’s economic developmen­t department. “This really is a signal that all of the pieces have come together.”

The store could become an important focal point for the roughly 65,000 people who work within a mile or so, along with the 12,000 or so permanent residents — not to mention tourists, Arizona State University students and fans attending games at the nearby arena or Chase Field. The new store is situated near multiple light rail stations.

Casciaro plans to walk to the new Fry’s. She has driven to a Safeway near Third Street and McDowell Road and a Sprout’s Farmers Market at Seventh Avenue and Osborne Road. Residentia­l momentum continues

Downtown’s growth, which slowed during the recession, has picked up in recent years. The area added more than 2,600 residentia­l units since Fry’s announced its plans four years ago, Klocke

said, with another 2,000 residentia­l units under constructi­on and 2,600 or so planned within several months.

“Over the last three years, the residentia­l market has exploded,” he said.

Ron Butler, managing partner at Ernst & Young in Arizona and chairman of the Downtown Phoenix Partnershi­p, hailed the new Fry’s and the high-rise building it will anchor as another sign of a “vibrant and growing downtown.”

Metro Phoenix overall has expanded, with one of the nation’s strongest employment markets and high rates of inmigratio­n. Overall retail vacancy rates have stayed in the single-digit range for 20 straight quarters, said Colliers Internatio­nal, a real estate services firm. The company called metro Phoenix “healthy despite national retail struggles.”

But the numbers by themselves didn’t ensure a company such as Kroger, which owns Fry’s, would take a chance.

“People first had to believe in downtown,” Klocke said.

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