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Griffith said the new store expects locals to be 80 percent to 90 percent of its customers. It features a Harlem Designer Collection with colorful beach wear and towels from designers Isabel and Ruben Toledo and dresses and skirts from Stephen Burrows. Chef and restaurateur Marcus Samuelsson, a Harlem resident, has designed pot holders and napkins. The collection rolls out to 50 East Coast stores and online Aug. 1. The new store carries a larger share of necessities, including the detergent brand Suavitel, which Colgate-Palmolive markets to Hispanics, plus personal-care products geared for black and Hispanic people. Kenneth J. Knuckles, who leads the Upper Manhattan Empowerment Zone, said about 545,000 people live north of 96th Street, about 23 percent of them in East Harlem. It is among the nation's poorest neighborhoods, with unemployment as high as 20 percent and almost 27 percent of households living below the poverty line, he said. Target's opening is a welcome "jolt" to the neighborhood, he said.
Company executives said they won't put local stores out of business because the store carries only 65 percent of a typical household's grocery needs. But don't expect Lisa Echevarria, 30, an East Harlem resident with two children, to visit local bodegas anymore. "Target has everything," said Echevarria, a restaurant worker. Stopping by the store Wednesday, she said Target charges half as much for milk as her neighborhood store.
[Associated
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