Re: One Canal (formerly Greenway Center, Bullfinch Triangle)
All these stores have suburban style business plans. It's a big risk for them to open an urban market, believe it or not. There needs to be proof that it would work economically. There is more to it than "people in the neighborhood want it". Rents in the city are so much higher than some strip mall. And space is constrained so they'd need to engineer a multi-level store. None of this is really difficult to do... just more expensive than a box off the highway.
It's been done before but not by Shaws or Stop & Shop. Whole Foods does it but they are a premium brand and would only build a new store in an area with high income. Look where there are Whole Foods: btwn West End and Beacon Hill, btwn Back Bay and South End, JP, Brookline, and three in Cambridge. And even these locations are arguably suburban style. Honestly I don't see a Whole Foods coming into the North End; it doesn't make sense.
Shaws and Stop & Shop, and suburban super markets in general, rely on large stores with lots of inventory, cheaply built with low overhead, which makes money on the margins. That doesn't work in a city unless you have a flagship store that will lose money (or a specialty supermarket that is subsidized by the other stores).
There is also the space issue. Suburban stores have loading docks. Where will you fit a loading dock in the middle of the North End? The trucks load on the streets and it will make traffic terrible. I see this in New York with Trader Joe's and other super markets. Where in Boston would a super market on this level have the space for loading?