Target thinks it knows what the young professionals who live in Uptown want from its newest store: activewear, Starbucks and lots of groceries, especially organic varieties.
The small-format store opening Wednesday in the heart of the bustling Minneapolis neighborhood — a stone's throw from a CorePower Yoga, CycleBar and LA Fitness — includes plenty of yoga pants and jazzy sports bras from the retailer's new JoyLab brand as well as its popular C9 line.
Its Starbucks, the next nearest one being more than 10 blocks away, has a seating area where customers can recharge their phones. And even though a Cub Foods and Lunds also are close by, it will include a full lineup of groceries on par with the selection carried at its bigger suburban stores (though not as extensive, of course, as a SuperTarget).
The 21,400-square-foot store, about one-sixth the size of a typical Target store, is part of a wave of about a dozen new store openings this week for Minneapolis-based Target Corp. Also on the roster is one in high-profile Herald Square in midtown Manhattan across from Macy's flagship store, as well as locations in and around Chicago, Los Angeles and Philadelphia. All but one of the new stores opening this week, a full-size store in Honolulu, are Target's smaller-format stores.
While other traditional retailers are closing multiple locations as they struggle to adopt to online shopping, Target has been doubling down on stores through remodels and the new smaller formats.
Target opened its first small-format store in 2014 in Dinkytown near the University of Minnesota. It has since opened dozens more around the country — including one in St. Paul's Highland Park neighborhood — placing them in underserved areas such as college neighborhoods or in dense urban and suburban areas where its bigger stores wouldn't otherwise easily fit.
These smaller stores, while still relatively few in number compared with Target's 1,800 big-box stores, are part of the retailer's growth strategy. The retailer is opening 32 new stores this year, most of them with the smaller format, and is planning to ramp up the pace in the next couple of years to 40 new stores a year.
Target also has been stung as consumers increasingly shop online at Amazon.com and other websites, but Target sees an opportunity to leverage its new stores for both in-store and online shopping.