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The CEO of Sprouts said that he didn't like the area. He couldn't see Sprouts making it here. How he got that idea, I don't know.
Good market research, like the folks at Central market did years ago when they decided this was an HEB but not a Central Market community. And it was a good call, too. The modal shopper in BCS is't looking for heirloom vegetables, organic meats, a wide variety of seafood, gourmet coffees, etc.
Probably one reason why the folks running Village Foods barely even tried to make the place look even remotely appealing or interesting.
Central Market isn't here because H-E-B doesn't really build Central Markets in the region. For all the "Houston has X, why don't we have any" businesses, guess how many Central Markets in Houston there are? Just one, in a very nice part of town.
Village Foods is low-end because it's essentially just a facelift on an old grocery store. Remember, it was an AppleTree, and the main reason AppleTree collapsed in the early 1990s as a 100-store spin-off of the old Safeway division was largely due because they had no money and a collection of outdated stores (at the time, the Bryan store was one of the largest, most modern stores they had, if that tells you anything). I worked at Village Foods for a while, and while there were many people who would make the drive to buy foods that they couldn't elsewhere, a majority of the customers were retirees or lower-income people who took advantage of the store's "traditional" grocery options. And after around 6 pm, the store would be dead, while the H-E-B down the street would be booming. The people who wanted the even nicer stuff went to Houston, which is not uncommon...our little economy essentially subsidizes Houston's, like people who skip Post Oak Mall in favor of that outlet mall off 290, so it's not as big as a matter of "we can't afford it" (except Brazilian steakhouses. We definitely can't afford it)
The Kettle too is a relic. The website for the chain is down (permanently?) but from what I could determine from little they have left, I think I counted about a dozen (the 21 mentioned on Wikipedia is out of date) spread throughout four states. Two decades ago it was ten times that many. The Luby's also was a relic from another time (it opened in the early 1970s IIRC), and the traditional Luby's have been shutting down left and right in recent years (a few new Fuddruckers/Luby's combos have opened in the last few years, though).