Newsday Confirms MI King Kullen Will Close

https://www.newsday.com/business/king-kullen-closing-cdg7vw08?utm_medium=web_share_api&utm_campaign=web_share_api

Although this is not news to regular civic meeting attendees, it is still jarring to see this sad development in print — and certainly very upsetting to regular shoppers (and perhaps even some employees) who may not have known. MICA has been in regular contact with the landlord, Island Associates head Roger Delisle, since rumors began last fall. Roger is in talks with several other major grocers, including Aldi, Meat Farms and Shop Rite. He is committed to getting a new tenant there asap. We believe the current lease goes to August; the closing date is still unknown.

What is known is that our area is on the brink of becoming a food desert: the closing of StopnShop in Coram last year and now King Kullen (the nation’s first grocery store chain) are double blows to our economy and needs of our residents. We need access to fresh, reasonably-priced groceries in OUR neighborhoods. We shouldn’t have to drive 10 miles, or spend an hour by bus, to make these essential purchases IN PERSON.

Text of the Newsday article by Tory Parrish

By Tory N. Parrish Updated April 17, 2025 9:49 am

King Kullen, Long Island’s largest family-owned grocery chain, is closing another supermarket, this time a 34-year-old store in Middle Island.

The store is located at 1235 Middle Country Rd. in the Strathmore Commons Shopping Center.

The supermarket occupies about 45,000 square feet, said Robert Monahan, property manager for Island Associates Real Estate Inc., the Smithtown-based company that manages the center.

Monahan confirmed that the store will be closing but said he did not know when or the reason for theimpending shutdown.

The King Kullen in Middle Island opened in January 1991, according to a grand-opening advertisement in Newsday’s archives. 

Headquartered in Hauppauge, King Kullen Grocery Co. did not respond to Newsday’s inquiries Wednesday about the reason for the store’s closing, the timeline for the closing and the number of affected employees.

Most of the grocery company’s store employees are members of the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union.

UFCW Local 1500 in Westbury represents 41 part-time and nine full-time employees working in the front-end, grocery, produce, dairy, frozen food, deli, bakery and receiving areasof King Kullen’s Middle Island store, said Aly Y. Waddy, secretary-treasurer for the local union.

“Local 1500 is working to maintain as many jobs as possible. [There is] no indication of any layoffs yet,” she said Wednesday. 

The impending closing of the Middle Island store is disappointing, since the shutdown will leave the hamlet in Brookhaven Town with one small grocery store, Sunny Farms Marketplace, said Gail Lynch-Bailey, president of the Middle Island Civic Association.

The 26,000-square-foot Sunny Farms opened in May on Middle Country Road, about a mile from the Middle Island King Kullen.

Citing last year’s closing of Coram’s only supermarket, a Stop & Shop that was 4.3 miles from the King Kullen in Middle Island, Lynch-Bailey said, “Now we have two major food chains that have left us and that’s disturbing,” she said. 

‘America’s first supermarket’

King Kullen Grocery Co. operates 30 stores on Long Island, including 26 King Kullen supermarkets. The other four are Wild by Nature natural food stores.

Founded in Queens in 1930, King Kullen markets itself as “America’s first supermarket,” a claim confirmed by the Smithsonian Institution.

King Kullen is still the largest family-owned grocery chain on Long Island, but the grocer and other traditional supermarket chains have closed a number of stores over the past several years as more discount and specialty grocery competitors have expanded in or entered the Long Island market.

Last year, Quincy, Massachusetts-based Stop & Shop, a traditional supermarket chain that is the largest grocer on Long Island, where it has 46 supermarkets, closed 32 Northeast stores, including four on Long Island, that it said were underperforming. 

Since 2019, King Kullen Grocery Co. has closed seven stores, including a King Kullen supermarket in Levittown in October that the company said was underperforming.

The company closed three other stores — in Mount Sinai, Lake Ronkonkoma and North Babylon — which it said were underperforming, in 2019, several months after Stop & Shop said it would buy all King Kullen Grocery Co.’s stores, which then totaled 37.

The Stop & Shop deal was called off in June 2020.

King Kullen Grocery Co. closed two King Kullen stores in Franklin Square and Glen Cove in July 2022 and a Wild by Nature in May 2023.