Fiesta Mart
USINFO | 2013-12-02 14:27

HEALTH & BEAUTY CARE
 

You can find everything that you need in our Health & Beauty Care aisle from toothpaste, shampoo, deodorants, and baby care, to items such as pain relief, cold and allergy remedies, first aid, etc.  You are guaranteed to find the items you know and love such as Head & Shoulders, Crest, Total, Derman, Vanart, Broncolin, Neurobion, Ponds, Obao and many, many more. 
We carry medicines that are not prescription medicines and can be purchased over the counter. Our stores also carry supplements to ensure that you have all the vitamins to lead an active life.
 

Fiesta Mart
 

Fiesta Mart / Carnival Food Stores

Type

Subsidiary

Industry

Retail

Founded

1972

Headquarters

Houston, Texas, U.S.

Products

Bakery, beer, dairy, delicatessen, frozen foods, gasoline, general merchandise, meat, pharmacy, produce, seafood, wine

Parent

Grocers Supply
homepage = fiestamart.com



Fiesta Mart headquarters
 


Fiesta Mart location inMidtown, Houston, Texas,United States
Fiesta Mart Inc. is an American supermarket chain based in Houston, Texas[1] that was established in 1972. Fiesta Mart operates stores in Texas, including the Houston, Dallas/Fort Worth, Austin, and Waco areas. The chain uses a cartoon parrot as a mascot. As of 2004 it operated 34 supermarkets in Greater Houston, 16 supermarkets in other locations in Texas, and 17 Beverage Mart liquor store locations. During the same year it had 7.5% of the grocery market share in Greater Houston. Many of its stores were located in Hispanic neighborhoods and other neighborhoods with minority ethnic groups.[2]
The chain caters to Hispanic customers; Allison Wollam of the Houston Business Journal said "The company has been successful at targeting the Hispanic market and specifically catering to their needs and shopping styles."[3] Bernie Murphy, a spokesperson for Fiesta, said in 2006 that at some stores Hispanics make up to 70% of that store's clientele.[4] Fiesta caters to these customers with a large selection of foods and ingredients that are generally not available at a typical grocery store. Fiesta stores also often include several other stores owned by independent operators, such as discount jewelry and banking. Fiesta also operates Fiesta Liquor Stores, where only alcohol is sold.


History
In 1972, Donald Bonham and O.C. Mendenhall started Fiesta; neither of the men had Hispanic ethnic backgrounds. Bonham had farmed in Belize and Guatemala and supervised the creation of a Chilean supermarket chain.[3] When Bonham returned to Texas, he believed that Houston-area businesses did not adequately cater toMexican Americans, a large segment of the city's population. Bonham opened the first Fiesta, which catered exclusively to Hispanic Americans. As the demographics of Houston changed, by the late 1970s Fiesta added African, Indian, Korean, and Vietnamese items.[5] By the mid-1980s Fiesta had 15 stores.[6] By 1989 the stores also featured items catering to African Americans and Thai Americans. By that year Fiesta had $420 million in annual sales, including $25 million in apparel sales.[5] As the chain developed, its clientele became larger and included Hispanics in the second and third generations.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Fiesta operated a very large supermarket and general goods store, an early version of modern supercenters like Walmart Supercenter or SuperTarget, at the southwest side of the intersection of I-45 and Texas State Highway NASA Road 1 in Webster, TX. This store was targeted towards the surrounding community, which was one of the more affluent Houston suburbs. It featured a large, sloped hydroponic garden along the north wall. The floor space was slowly sold off in portions in the 1990s.[1] As of 2011, the location is now called the NASA Value Center Shopping Center and has no Fiesta presence.
In 1994, Fiesta acquired four locations sold by Appletree Markets. In 1998 Fiesta made a marketing agreement with Conoco Inc. to allow the gas station chain to build gas stations on the properties of Fiesta supermarkets. In 1999 Fiesta had 10.9% of Houston's grocery market.
In 2004, Fiesta Mart was acquired by Grocers Supply, a family owned Houston-based wholesale groceries distributor.[9] On July 23, 2008 Fiesta Mart acquired eleven Carnival Brand stores from Minyard Food Stores.


Locations

  • Baton Rouge, Louisiana

  • Greater Austin

    • Austin (2 locations)

  • Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex

    • Arlington

    • Carrollton

    • Dallas (7 locations)

    • Forest Hill

    • Fort Worth (3 locations)

    • Garland

    • Irving (2 locations)

    • Plano


  • Greater Houston

    • Unincorporated Harris County (3 locations)

    • Houston (26 locations)

    • Missouri City

    • Rosenberg

    • South Houston


Former stores

  • Beaumont, Texas (1994-1995, site is now the headquarters of Conn's, Inc., a chain of electronics/appliance stores in Texas, Louisiana, and Oklahoma)

  • Grand Prairie, Texas (Carnival food store 1999-2008; SAVERS COST + PLUS 2008–present)

  • 1 location in Spring Branch, Houston - Now 99 Ranch Market[11][12]

  • Montrose, Houston (1994-2012), site is intended to be an apartment complex development

 
 

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