To be honest, I don't think that it becoming a grocery store has taken away from it at all. That makes it all the more unique. Also, Heinen's is a pretty well respected grocery store chain in the city. They sell high quality foods and it's a place I remember my mother and grandmother taking me to all the time when my sister and I were kids. So it's not at all like it was bought out by a national chain or something along those lines. It doesn't feel like that at all. Instead it feels like a respectful move towards solidifying the community and architectural legacy of the city.
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