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A peek inside a state-of-the-art c-store

In the c-store business, Sheetz is revered as a trendsetter, particularly in blending the line between retailing and foodservice. Here's a look at the innovator's most food-forward format to date.

Angel Abcede

June 13, 2016

2 Min Read
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A proscenium frames a stone pizza oven, open kitchen and barista-manned coffee bar. Cherry-oak tile leads to an “Order Fresh Food Here” pillar with flat-screens displaying photos of pastrami sandwiches, cheeseburgers topped with fried eggs and breakfast burritos, available to order at self-serve kiosks. This isn’t some high-tech food court or trendy fast casual; it’s a convenience store.

Sheetz developed the concept—a foot traffic-reliant c-store without gas pumps on the campus of West Virginia University—as a laboratory to hone the company’s future as a food-first cafe.

With channel-blurring forcing a tighter bond between convenience goods and foodservice, the new Sheetz could be an incarnation of things to come, and stiffer competition for noncommercial operations. Among its millennial-friendly features:

1. Food first

When customers step into the main vestibule, they see a restaurant instead of a c-store. Made-to-order items are prepared in an amphitheater-like setting, creating transparency, so customers can watch their custom pizzas and coffee drinks come to life.

2. Flexible seating

On the flip side of grab-and-go, more c-stores are emulating restaurant-style seating. At Sheetz, indoor and outdoor seating encourages lingering. There are matching tables that can be pushed together, booths for six or eight and a high bar of 12 counter-height seats, where solo diners can wait for their orders.

Related:Whole Foods provides a twist on the convenience store

3. Tech ready

The seating area has multiple outlets and USB ports for students who want to plug in while eating.

4. Self-serve checkout

“Pay here” signs and impulse aisles define a path to checkout areas, but within that queue are two self-service payment kiosks. Sheetz officials hope to measure the concept’s potential when lines build during peak hours.

5. Major marketing

Sheetz used social media, campus newspaper ads and both digital and static signage to get the word out to students in advance of the store’s opening, according to Tamara Dunkley, corporate advertising manager for the c-store operator.

A version of this article, written by Angel Abcede, ran in CSP magazine, FoodService Director's sister publication.

About the Author

Angel Abcede

Angel Abcede is the former senior editor at CSP magazine, covering industry trends, investigative topics, technology and tobacco. His 25-year history with the channel fortifies his perspective and motivates him to seek out what's relevant, innovative and telling. 

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