Bob Mariano is returning to the grocery industry with a $10 million investment to create a new chain aimed at combining shopping, restaurant dining and home delivery.
The new venture, Dom’s Market & Kitchen, is planned for a March 2021 debut at a yet-to-be announced Lincoln Park location. The small-format store will feature specialty foods and take-home and dine-in meals prepared in an open kitchen. Groceries and meal kits will also be available for delivery, according to a statement from the new company. It plans to add Chicago locations, focusing on urban neighborhoods, once its Lincoln Park spot is up and running.
Mariano is partnering with fellow industry veterans Jay Owen and Don Fitzgerald to jump-start the venture. Owen is the grandson of Dominick’s founder Dominick DiMatteo, and Fitzgerald was a former executive with Mariano at Roundy’s. Mariano was CEO and chairman of Milwaukee-based Roundy's, before Cincinnati-based Kroger acquired the company in 2015. He retired a year later, after Kroger instituted executive team consolidations amid budgetary pressures.
"Dom’s will be a neighborhood destination where consumers can drop in several times per week, explore new foods, watch the cooking process in open preparation areas, participate in a wine tasting class, dine in, or take home prepared foods or cooking ingredients," Owen said in the statement.
Dominick's closed in 2013 after it failed to modernize stores and compete with Whole Foods.
Mariano, best best-known for his namesake area grocery chain, was able to correct the mistakes made at Dominick's with Mariano's Fresh Markets. The 41 stores around the Chicago area initially featured upscale dining options like an oyster bar, a live piano player and wine-tasting events.
But Mariano's stores have faced mounting customer criticism in recent years with Kroger implementing changes like introducing more private-label brands, increasing the number of self-checkout lanes and removing those upscale upgrades.
NFriday wrote:I wish Kroger had never taken over Mariano's. When this happened Bob said that this would not affect the Mariano stores, but they have been dumbed down to save money. They got rid of the piano player, and the produce section is not nearly as good as it used to be. When I go in the store at 4:00 usually there is nobody working in produce. The only good thing is that the prices are a little cheaper. I wish he never would have sold the chain to Kroger.
chicagojim wrote:
I never saw any purpose in the piano player, so that was no loss to us.
ronnie_suburban wrote:Good luck. Like everything else they touch, Kroger destroyed Mariano's.
=R=
JoelF wrote:It's funny, I've drifted back to Jewel too, I'd been mostly Mariano's last year.
There are still things the Glenview West store does better than Mount Prospect Jewel:
Orange juice
Breakfast sausage at the meat counter
Krab and shrimp salad
Cheese selection
But those are only occasional purchases. Empty shelves of basic produce (cilantro, ginger, both on multiple occasions) make it a tough place to go for regular shopping.