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Over the weekend, the world’s largest Aldija was inaugurated in the city of Mülheim in the Ruhr region of Germany, offering a host of new solutions due to its enormous size.
The XXL-format store has an area of 2,000 square meters, which is twice the average size of the store, according to an article from Retaildetail.eu.
Virtually an Aldi unit, which has been in operation since 1993, opened next to the adjoining 300-square-foot store, resulting in a more spacious store interior than ever after proper remodel.
Larger spaces offered significantly more opportunities for interior design and inventory placement. They offer a total of 1700 items, which is roughly the same as the selection at other Aldi stores, but there are many more items on the shelves than in a traditional store.
The new store, apostrophized by Aldi as an XXL store, received customers with 7 shelves with a total width of 30 and a length of 60 meters. There is also a 70 meter long refrigerated cooling line, and in a huge oven, employees bake fresh baked goods several times a day.
However, the store’s biggest attraction is the small freestanding garden where six different herbs are grown.
Tesco started a war against Aldi
Tesco is introducing red bubbles: In its UK stores, it brands hundreds of products whose prices have been aligned with those of Aldi. This marks the beginning of a new chapter in Tesco’s fight against discounts. Tesco adjusts the price of hundreds of products, including its own brand-name products, to Aldie to offer British customers even more favorable prices for its popular products, the Tesco ad cites as Napi.hu.
Another novelty is that prices are no longer written on paper labels but on digital whiteboards.
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