Whole Foods Market location closes in Seattle as city sees retail exodus

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“We regularly evaluate the performance and growth potential of our stores and make decisions to position the company for long-term success.”

Seattle’s Capitol Hill is losing another major retailer as Whole Foods Market announced it will permanently close its store at Madison and Broadway on June 20. The 40,000-square-foot, two-level location at the base of the 17-story Danforth apartment building opened in October 2018, just a year after Amazon acquired the grocery chain for $13.7 billion.

The store was located near the deadly 2020 Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone and was regularly targeted with vandalism. The neighborhood has not recovered fully since the armed occupation, “All team members will transfer to roles at nearby Whole Foods Market locations,” the company said in a statement, per the Capitol Hill Seattle Blog. “We regularly evaluate the performance and growth potential of our stores and make decisions to position the company for long-term success.”

The closure comes after Amazon shut down its nearby Fresh grocery store on Pike Street in April 2024. That location initially opened as an Amazon Go Grocery store in 2020.

The string of closures is part of a broader pattern of retail and hospitality flight from Seattle, as companies cite escalating operating costs, persistent property crime, labor instability, and deteriorating street conditions. James Beard Award-winning chef Renee Erickson recently announced she was permanently closing two General Porpoise café locations and temporarily shuttering her flagship steakhouse, Bateau, and Boat Bar, all citing these same pressures.

Earlier this year, despite consistently packed stores, Starbucks also permanently closed locations in high-traffic areas of Seattle. In 2022, then-CEO Howard Schultz explicitly blamed safety concerns and lack of leadership in Democrat-run cities, including Seattle. “At the local, state, and federal level, these governments... and leaders, mayors and governors, and city councils have abdicated their responsibility in fighting crime & addressing mental illness,” Schultz told employees.

Seattle has seen an exodus of major brands in recent years, including Nike, Target, and the Hard Rock Café, which have all pulled out of downtown. Amazon Go shuttered its flagship locations due to underperformance. Even smaller businesses have been driven out, citing the same frustrations voiced by corporate giants.

Concerns about the city’s safety and livability are affecting not just businesses but also major corporate events. Microsoft recently notified Visit Seattle, the city’s official tourism bureau, that it will relocate its 2026 Build conference and release all future bookings for the event in Seattle.

In an internal email titled, “Definite Booking Cancellation Notice,” Microsoft cited negative experiences by leadership and attendees walking through downtown Seattle. The report referenced “the general uncleanliness of the street scene, visibility of individuals engaging in drug use, and unhoused individuals,” including a recurring tent encampment in the Arch Tunnel near the convention center.

The company also referenced ongoing disruptions, including this year’s Build conference being targeted by pro-Palestinian activists, some of whom managed to break into the event and vandalize the building.

Restaurateur David Meinert confirmed complaints from attendees about “open-air drug use, aggressive behavior, and tents crowding sidewalks.” In a Facebook post, he added: “Mayor Bruce Harrell’s downtown activation plan is not having the success he claims. I can tell you firsthand how poorly the massive spending on different city agencies is going, due to the inability for them to communicate and work together. It’s 100% about lack of leadership.”

Visit Seattle acknowledged the Microsoft cancellation as a “huge loss for the city,” and admitted that years of effort to address the convention district’s issues had not been enough.

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