Walmart's Total Retail Space Is Larger Than Manhattan
The latest issue of GOOD Magazine has a sweet graphic showing the comparative landmass taken up by the world's largest retail chains. Walmart leads with a total square footage larger than Manhattan. By comparison, McDonald's has a net footrprint of about 1 and 3/4 Central Parks. The image also shows 7-11, Blockbuster, Subway, KFC, GAP, Burger King, Starbucks, and Wendy's.
Not that we're advocating a return to the cave, but it's awesome sometimes to ponder the amount physical Earth taken up by cookie-cutter concrete.
Hit the GOOD site for the graphic in its full 1844 pixel wide glory.
Retail Real Estate [GOOD]
Attention, Walmart shoppers! This ad is for you! Woo hoo!
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Comments:
The graph does not have any other big box stores on it with their parking lots. Some of the other stores listed use on street parking such as star bucks etc. othes are geared for short term stays, they want you to eat and get out. Walmart wants you to stay longer.
Plus these acreages are not really much. Ive worked on farms and ranches in TX that are not measured in such small entities as acres...they are measured in Sq. Miles. Walmarts 18,000 acres is only 28 sq. miles which is not much when you look t the number of stores and their parking lots.
@MonkeyMonk: I suspect that Wendy's has more locations inside food courts, truck stops, and campus student unions. They probably don't count anything but the actual work area for locations like that since the seating and parking would be shared by many businesses.
@meehawl: As far as "global giants" go, neither Aldi nor Trader Joe's are near the top of the list. [supermarketnews.com]
@Ben Popken: now that you mention it, I think i'll put clouds in my powerpoint presentations from now on. if clouds could make this graph look good, im set for life
Manhattan isn't all that big, but a lot of impressive things come out of Manhattan. It's a cultural hotspot. It also represents a huge diversity of merchants, many of which are local businesses.
For all their acreage, what does WalMart contribute to the nation? Low quality merchandise.
What we are talking about is a waste of space. Land is perhaps our rarest resource (after freshwater), and we are devoting huge amounts of it to giant retailers that provide us with cheap crap.
@JEFF303:
Aldi owns Trader Joe's so you've got to count them together. And France's Carrefour is larger than either of them, just behind Walmart in total retail sales dollar volume. That chart on your link shows northamerican sales only - respectable, but not really representative of global sales!
This chart shows ranked global sales in dollar volume (not store space):
[supermarketnews.com]
Check the store numbers, Carrefour is at 12,000 next to Walmart's 6,000 (store sizes are different, of course).





That is a ridiculous graph. Does Wal-Mart really take up about three times as much land than the nearest competitor?