A Kroger-anchored shopping center in Gwinnett County quietly changed hands on Friday in a $23 million deal, according to local reporting. The buyer has only been described as a local investor, and market watchers say the property has room for higher rents and new leasing to fatten its income stream. The trade highlights the steady appetite investors still have for grocery-anchored retail across Atlanta’s suburbs.
As reported by the Atlanta Business Chronicle, the sale closed at $23 million, with brokers calling out the center’s “leasing upside.” Reporter Henry Queen noted that the purchaser is a local buyer, while details on the seller and the full tenant lineup were not disclosed. Those pieces should surface in public records once the transaction is fully recorded.
Why grocery anchors still attract buyers
Nationally, investors have been flocking to grocery-anchored and other necessity-based retail because those properties tend to deliver steadier shopper traffic and more durable occupancy, Bisnow reported. That shift toward everyday-needs retail has helped prop up values for well-located community and neighborhood centers, even as apparel-heavy shopping centers face a rougher ride.
Where this fits in Gwinnett…