Hong Kong Supermarket
Hong Kong Supermarket is an Asian American supermarket chain started in the San Gabriel Valley region of Southern California. It operates mainly in the newer suburban overseas Chinese communities, particularly in the Los Angeles, Philadelphia, and New York City areas. Hong Kong Supermarket specializes mainly in imported Asian groceries. Many items are from Mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau, Japan, South Korea, Thailand, Taiwan, Vietnam, Indonesia, and the Philippines.
Type | Private |
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Industry | Retail |
Founded | 1981 (Los Angeles, California) |
Founder | Jeffrey Wu |
Headquarters | Los Angeles, California |
Number of locations | 6 |
Products | Bakery, dairy, deli, frozen foods, grocery, meat, produce, seafood, snacks, liquor |
Hong Kong Supermarket | |||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 香港超級市場 | ||||||
Simplified Chinese | 香港超级市场 | ||||||
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The supermarket caters to a specific customer base. The first store in Monterey Park, California, was a popular destination for Mainland Chinese emigres, and the Hong Kong Supermarkets in New York City focus on Mainland Chinese immigrant customers (large community of mainlanders in Brooklyn).
Hong Kong Supermarket was established in 1981 by Jeffrey Wu with its former flagship store located in Monterey Park, California, where it is still among the popular Asian supermarkets, and is headquartered in New York City. It is currently owned by Jeffrey Wu (胡兆明) and his wife, former Hong Kong actress Veronica Yip. In Southern California, its main competitors were 99 Ranch Market and Shun Fat Supermarket. In the New York City area, it competes with Kam Man Food, Good Fortune Supermarket, New York Mart, and Great Wall Supermarket. In Boston, it competes with Kam Man, H Mart, and C-Mart.
In 2009, Hong Kong purchased Super 88, an Asian supermarket chain which had already closed three of its six stores in 2008, citing poor sales.[1] Super 88 had also faced increasing competition and a $200,000 settlement after violating state wage and hour laws.[2]
The chain sold much of its stores to the Good Fortune Supermarket chain.
Locations
- Georgia
- Norcross - 5495 Jimmy Carter Blvd
- Massachusetts
- New York
- Manhattan - 157 Hester St
- Texas
- Houston - 11205 Bellaire Blvd
Defunct locations
- California
- Monterey Park - 127 N Garfield Ave (became a Good Fortune Supermarket)
- Rowland Heights (now HK2 Food District)
- San Gabriel (now a Good Fortune Supermarket)
- West Covina (now HK2 Food District)
- West Covina (now East West Supermarket)
- Monrovia (now a Good Fortune Supermarket)
- Massachusetts
- New Jersey
- South Plainfield (closed in 2008)
- East Brunswick
- New York
- Chinatown, Manhattan (closed May 14, 2009)
- Sunset Park (now a New York Mart)
- Elmhurst (now a US Supermarket)
- Flushing (now a SuperHK Supermarket, part of Good Fortune Supermarket)
- Pennsylvania
- Philadelphia (now a Hong Kong Hypermarket)
- Louisiana
- Gretna (now a Hong Kong Food Market)
References
- "Super 88 Closes Three Stores". 2008-10-13. Retrieved 2012-10-21.
- Megan Woolhouse (2012-08-27). "Super 88 grocers being sold". Boston Globe. Retrieved 2012-10-21.