Produce Pharmacy

 

 One of the stranger things about this store's exterior is the signage for various different departments on the exterior wall. I suspect this was some sort of design-board idea to make the store somehow look more like a series of smaller shops, not that it's even remotely convincing. (The redevelopment of the Upper Queen Anne Safeway, if it ever gets off the ground, is supposed to feature a more convincing version of this idea. Land use rant alert: For some reason, Seattle is obsessed with requiring small commercial/retail spaces in new buildings. The result has been that most newer mixed-use buildings have overpriced specialty retail spaces, or more commonly, big empty ground floors. Meanwhile, larger stores like Safeway and QFC are still largely stuck with suburban-style single-use stores with seas of surface parking, because whenever they try a mixed-use redevelopment, it turns into a big back and forth about whether they're allowed to have a reasonable store within a new building. I really don't understand how any of that that is supposed to be helpful in any way.) Back on topic: Interestingly, it looks like the pharmacy sign was replaced when this store got its Lifestyle remodel, but the rest of the department signs were left as is. They have slightly different fonts, and (quite noticeable in person, but not in this picture) the pharmacy sign is much less glossy than the others.

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