Showing posts with label NJ: Belmar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NJ: Belmar. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Jersey Shore Acme – Belmar NJ



Our return to the abandoned Acme in Belmar New Jersey now with...

MORE pictures,
BETTER QUALITY images
ALL NEW views of the back of the store,
NEW AND IMPROVED interior shots!

The Belmar Acme first made it's appearance here on the blog back in February 2009 when Acme Style was just getting it's feet off the ground. Looking back, the pictures for the original post were kinda lame. I wasn't as adventurous with taking the pictures in the beginning. These days I take much more time trying to capture the finer details of these old stores. The sun was definitely more cooperative on this trip as well. You can view the original post by clicking here.

As you can see above, the Belmar store had the red oval logo sign which came along with the 80's remodel. This store was not remodeled in the 80's. It's Colonial Decor was traded out with the Convenience Store Decor of the late 90's, as you will see down below. Not sure of the exact closing date here. Most likely in the early 2000's as Albertsons pulled the plug on many older Acmes.

Bread delivery door to the Acme. The section the to left was a Rite Aid which just recently relocated to Main Street. The building the Rite Aid moved into may very well have been an Acme. It's small but has the signature air vents and certainly has the feel of an old grocery store space.

Remarkably clean and nicely painted back of the store. This area is highly visable to passing trains and roads on either side of the shopping center. NJ Transit train tracks are just to the left of the photo with the train station just behind where I was standing.

Blacked out Acme sign along with the breakroom & employee bathroom windows.

Acme awnings still intact. West Marine boating store takes up about half the former Acme space.

I believe the metal beam sticking out at the top was for lifting compressors to the second floor. These beams were commonly seen at the back of the pitched-roof stores.


Produce receiving doors on the right side of the building. A strip mall attached to the old Acme extends to right. Nice detailing here...


I have been wanting to give this model of Acme Markets a name... and I think I have come up with one. The Colonial Cottage. This building style was rolled out after the pitched-roof model was retired in the late 60's. The Colonial Cottage model included the "deluxe" version of the Colonial Decor... which I have no pictures of other than the Produce floor which can be seen here.

Other Colonial Cottages posted here on Acme Style include...

Manasquan is the only unaltered Colonial Cottage still open. The Acme in Dresher Pennsylvania is the same model but the awning has been upgraded costing it some of it's charm. There may be other stores that started out with this model but have had extensive renovations and additions.

The Belmar store looks to be nearly identical to Manasquan although it doesn't extend as far back making this store smaller in size. Looks as though the width is about the same.

The Colonial Cottages had only one set of doors on the outside. There isn't a second set of doors inside much like how the pitched-roof stores were set up.

The wall as soon as you walk in. Shopping to the right. The windows are in the manager's office. Manasquan has the same exact set up. I tried to snap a picture there but two employees kept looking out the windows. One who seemed to think I was up to something. Can't imagine why.

The famous Acme railing! A section has been removed here. The railing helped keep customer flow straight along the front of the store and over to Produce. No cutting to Dairy from here unless the first register was closed.

The Convenience Store decor saw the end of the "Bakery"... unless there was an in-store Bakery.




The Colonial Decor's brown and orange paneling still in place along the Meat department wall.




You can see here how the Acme was set back from Main Street. I drove by this site for years before I turned my head and saw an abandoned Acme sitting there!

6 long blocks to the beach from this former Acme.



The sign over the back of the strip mall to the right of the Acme.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Abandoned Acme! Belmar, New Jersey

This former Acme is located on Main Street between 8th and 10th Avenues in the shore town of Belmar NJ. Just seven blocks in from the Atlantic Ocean. I am not sure when this store closed. Mostly likely in the early 2000's when Acme shut down many stores of this size all over NJ and PA. I have been going to the beaches of Belmar every summer since 2000 and was probably there when this Acme was still open. Thing is... I didn't know this Acme existed. Although it is on Main St it is set back about a 1/2 block and is not easily seen from the road unless you know it's there. Store fronts line Main Street blocking an easy view of the store except for a walkway right in front of the store.



Location: 825 8th Avenue, Belmar NJ

West Marine boating store has moved into the right side of the store.


A shot from Main Street. It's looks quite open in this shot but as you drive along Main St you don't notice Acme unless you turn and look.


There is a strip of stores to the right of the photo.


The former Produce supply doors dressed up at this Acme since they are easily seen from the other stores. This Acme and many of it's characteristics are exactly the same to other stores built in this era which I am guessing to be the early 70's.


The customer service office is directly across the foyer. Shoppers turned right as soon as they passed through these doors. The office had windows to look out into the foyer... you can see them through the doors.


The red oval logo... painted over! You can see it's still there if you look closely. This store was not remodeled in the 80's when Acmes switched from the fish-eye logo to the red oval. It's odd that this logo was changed since the facade of the store is original.

Check out the inside...

This store had the blue and beige convenience store wall graphics done in the late 90's. The orange and brown panels in the back are left over from the 70's colonial look. The odd thing at this location is that the floors appear to have never been upgraded. All beige. In the 70's, Acme's had white floors with a faux red and blue slate Produce floor, orange and brown along the Meat Department and gold and brown in the Bakery aisle. The wall to the right is where the boating store begins.


Check out stand foot prints.


The infamous railing. Every Acme had one in those days. The customer service office was off to the left. This looks to have been a very small store. Probably 8 or 9 rather short aisles.


Below is a screen shot from Live Maps. Shows how this Acme was buried out of view from just about every angle. Very limited parking in the shopping center. Must have been a nightmare when the Acme was just a little busy.