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Sainsbury's and For
Sainsbury's currently uses the " Live Well For Less " slogan which was launched on 15 September 2011.
For over 10 years, the council had proposed to allow a Sainsbury's supermarket to be built in Cawdor Quarry, a disused quarry next to the railway station.
For the former UK supermarket see Sainsbury's Savacentre

Sainsbury's and Used
* " Good Food Costs Less At Sainsbury's "Used from the 1960s to the 1990s.
* " Sainsbury's – Everyone's Favourite Ingredient "Used in a series of TV commercials in the 1990s which featured celebrities cooking Sainsbury's food.

Sainsbury's and above
A planned new Sainsbury's with apartments above the store has been singled out for note by New London Architecture.
St. Mary's Church ( 1871 ) stands above the modern Sainsbury's supermarket in Apsley.
Two rows of executive boxes ( 48 in total ) were constructed above the Whitehorse Lane terrace on the roof of Sainsbury's supermarket in 1991 and it was roofed and made all-seater in the summer of 1993.
Sainsbury's first annual report after the store opened in March 1997 noted that the store was " trading far above expectations ".

Sainsbury's and Drury
* May 22 – Sainsbury's first store, in Drury Lane, London, is opened.
His great-grandparents, John James Sainsbury and Mary Ann Staples, established a grocer's at 173 Drury Lane in 1869 which became the British supermarket chain Sainsbury's.
He was the first member of the Sainsbury family to be raised to the peerage, and chose the territorial designation of Drury Lane in his title, as Sainsbury's first shop was opened there in 1869.
His great-grandparents, John James Sainsbury and Mary Ann Staples, established a grocer's at 173 Drury Lane in 1869 which became the British supermarket chain Sainsbury's.
His great-grandparents, John James Sainsbury and Mary Ann Staples, established a grocer's at 173 Drury Lane in 1869 which became the British supermarket chain Sainsbury's.

Sainsbury's and Lane
In March 1985, a ' new ' Selly Oak was planted by local councillors on the north side of Bristol Road on the small triangle of land between Harborne Lane and the Sainsbury's site, following road improvements to the junction.
In 1981, Palace sold the back of the Whitehorse Lane terrace and land behind to supermarket retailer Sainsbury's for £ 2m, to help their financial problems and the size of the terrace at this end was effectively halved when this end reopened.
Notable former retailers include Tesco ( who left in the 1980s ), Sainsbury's ( who moved to a far larger supermarket adjacent to the centre, and which still acts as an anchor retailer for the complex ), Woolworths ( in a unit facing Garratt Lane which was demolished in 2005 ), and Iceland ( who closed in 2009 to make way for redevelopment ).
The current phase of the redevelopment involves the demolition and replacement of the centre's rather dilapidated eastern frontage along Garratt Lane to create of new shopfronts, partly aimed at strengthening the link between the centre and the adjacent Sainsbury's supermarket.

Sainsbury's and store
Following the relocation of Marks & Spencer from their previous town-centre store to the Nugent Shopping Park, their previous site was taken over by Sainsbury's, who moved from their previous site nearby in the Walnuts.
This culminated in 1990 when the closure of Pratt's-a department store, which had grown from a Victorian draper's shop, and had been operated since the 1940s by the John Lewis Partnership-coincided with the opening of a large Sainsbury's supermarket 1 km south of the town centre, replacing an old, smaller Sainbury's store opposite Streatham Hill railway station.
More recently Sainsbury's opened smaller ' Local ' branches on High Road and on Streatham Hill, near the site of the Streatham's first Sainsbury's store ( opened in 1895 ).
Most of the site was redeveloped in 1996 as a Savacentre ( as this was its original name ) by locals, Sainsburys ' Sydenham ' is one of the largest Sainsbury's store in the UK.
and a new Sainsbury's store on the Oxford road next to the Eden shopping centre and bus station.
Following the closure of Kwik Save supermarkets across the country, Pudsey's store was bought by Sainsbury's.
A large area south east of the shopping centre has made room for a Tesco superstore, which opened 1 November 2010, rivalling the Sainsbury's store located in the town centre and the recently built Lidl store on Wollaton Road to the north of the town centre.
To be eligible to redeem at a given Sainsbury's store, the customer must have collected Nectar points in that store within the previous twelve months, and at least 24 hours earlier.
This is in contrast to the Sainsbury's till system, which communicates with Nectar just once per day, during the night, and only downloads cardholder information to a store if the card has been swiped in that store in the past twelve months.
Unlike other operators, most notably Tesco, Sainsbury's and the Co-op, Morrisons had chosen not to move into the convenience store sector.
The most northern Sainsbury's Local is the Rosemount Place store in Aberdeen, which opened on Friday, 17 December 2010.
As well as this, Sainsbury's Bank also offers a Travel Money service in stores, with ' Sainsbury's Travel Money ' opening the 100th Travel Money bureau in its estate in May 2010 at the Hempstead Valley shopping centre store.
The Sainsbury's store in Lewisham Shopping Centre was briefly the largest supermarket in Europe.
Supplementing the town centre shops are several out-of-town retail parks and supermarkets including a Sainsbury's, four Tesco stores, an Aldi store and a Morrisons store in the town centre.

Sainsbury's and .
One of the first loyalty cards backed by a major chain is believed to be the Sainsbury's Homebase Spend and Save Card in 1982.
Of the " big four " supermarkets, only Sainsbury's and Tesco operate loyalty cards.
Sainsbury's launched its Reward Card in 1996.
This is not Marks and Spencer or Sainsbury's.
* Four companies ( Tesco, Sainsbury's, Asda and Morrisons ) share 74. 4 % of the grocery market.
In 2009, U. K. supermarket Sainsbury's renamed pollock ' Colin ' in a bid to boost ecofriendly sales of the fish as an alternative to cod.
Sainsbury's, which said the new name was derived from the French for cooked pollock ( colin ), launched the product under the banner " Colin and chips can save British cod.
Other chains caught on, and after Galvani lost out to Tesco's Jack Cohen in 1960 to buy the 212 Irwin's chain, the sector underwent a large amount of consolidation, resulting in ' the big four ' dominant UK retailers of today: Tesco, Asda ( owned by Wal-Mart ), Sainsbury's and Morrisons.
However this has been augmented by out-of-town developments such as the Springkerse Retail Park on the city bypass to the east of Stirling, and the development of a large Sainsbury's in the Raploch.
Smith, Sainsbury's, Caffe Nero, T-Mobile, Carphone Warehouse, Greggs, Fara Charity Shop, Waitrose, Cattle Grid, Nando's and Pizza Express, as well as several upmarket independent stores, trendy coffee houses and brasseries, but also some bargain basement shops.
There is also a large Sainsbury's supermarket in the centre of Balham with its own car park and 181 spaces.
Rough concrete is put through all its paces, front convex eaves on Sainsbury's to a staircase tower which is either afflicted with an astounding set of visual distortions or is actually leaning.
The area consists of a large Sainsbury's supermarket, a neighbouring park, numerous independent shops and restaurants, a post office and several banks.
The key shops are a large Sainsbury's supermarket situated next to stadium.
Access to the station is available from Lower Station Road, although Bexley Council has promoted a bridge linking Sainsbury's, Crayford Stadium and the West of the town with the station.
In recent years Sainsbury's acquired the site, built DHFC a new ground, and developed one of the largest Sainsbury's in the country.
However, since 2009 there has been a marked increase in independent shops being replaced with chain stores including Pret A Manger, Costa Coffee and Sainsbury's.
Since the opening of a new Sainsbury's in the early 1980s ( closed 2001 ) and, more significantly, a Tesco superstore in 1987, there has been a shift in the town's retail, predominantly charity shops, estate agents, restaurants and bars.

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