New Borderland Co-op c-store and gas bar opens in Kipling, Saskatchewan
Hot food available
Another feature at the Kipling store are the hot food options, including Co-op’s own brand of fried chicken. Brought in fresh daily and prepared in the on-site kitchen, Schenn says, “it’s as close to a homemade meal as you’re going to be able to get in a grab-and-go situation.”
He’s admittedly also a big fan of the tasty treats.
“I can’t go by them without stopping and getting some tenders or some wedges! It’s great stuff,” said Schenn. “It’s pretty popular, and it’s reasonably priced, too. You can feed a family for $30—it’s hard to do that these days.”
The focus on serving fresh, hot food fills a gap in the local market as Schenn pointed out.
“In Kipling, there are not a lot of options after six o’clock for food,” he said. “I think that’s kind of a niche for us, that we’re going to be able to fill a void that doesn’t exist right now for the community.”
Aside from the chicken, hot tables will feature a variety of warm foods.
“That’s kind of unique to this one—we have a lot of programs in some of our other sites as well, but this one probably has the most programs within it—and a bigger kitchen,” Schenn said. “Just some things that we’ve learned over our last few projects that we’ve done where we’ve added chicken or other hot and fresh kind of programming.”
New site was on time and may come in under budget
During the planning stages of the Kipling project, the two pump, four-lane gas bar plus 3,000-square-foot convenience store was expected to cost around $4.5 million. This included all petroleum assets, computer equipment, and associated costs that go along with a new build. Schenn believes the Kipling store will come in under the expected price tag.
“I think we’re actually going to end up coming in a little under budget,” he confirmed. “I’m hoping to know more on that next week. There’s still a couple of things that we got to fix up— some contracts and that—but for the most part, we know what the numbers are going to be, and it’s just a matter of crunching the last little bits here and seeing where we actually sit compared to the budget. I think we’re on track to be under the budget, which is tremendous. You don’t hear that very often these days. That’s a testament to our crew that we’ve got internally, that kind of quarterbacked this whole project.”
This is the sixth C-Store in the region that Borderland Co-op serves. Actual construction went fairly smoothly, aside from some early-summer rain delays that temporarily shut down several projects in general throughout the province.
“Ideally, it would have been nicer to be into September when we opened, but there were a few rain weeks that you can’t do anything about when you’re doing groundwork,” Schenn said. “That put us behind a little bit, but overall, we’re happy with where we are. We’re in business, and there’s still some nice weather ahead of us, and we can get some kinks worked out before the snow flies and the weather turns cold.”