
New Grand Mart is stepping into the long-dark Shoppers space at Coral Hills Shopping Center, putting a large international supermarket back on the map in Capitol Heights. The deal plugs a highly visible anchor hole along Marlboro Pike and could help restore grocery access many residents lost when Shoppers shut its doors last fall. Local officials and brokers have not yet put a firm opening date on the calendar for the new store.
According to CoStar, New Grand Mart has signed a lease to occupy the former Shoppers anchor at the Coral Hills Shopping Center, listed as 4783 Marlboro Pike in Capitol Heights. The center's commercial listing puts the anchor footprint at roughly 34,251 square feet and identifies Broad Street Realty as the leasing broker, with Michael Jacoby named as the contact. The center's broker page and site plan are posted on LoopNet, which is marketing the property to prospective tenants.
Shoppers' Exit and Why It Mattered
The Shoppers at Coral Hills closed on Nov. 8, 2025, one of several regional shutdowns that county leaders warned could tighten an already thin grocery landscape in Prince George's County. The Maryland Department of Labor's WARN log records the Coral Hills location's closure on Nov. 8, 2025, and FOX5 reported elected officials raising concerns about potential food-desert impacts after the closures were announced.
Who New Grand Mart Is
New Grand Mart is a regional international grocer with an existing foothold in several suburbs around Washington, D.C. Local permitting and business records list New Grand Mart permits and locations in Hyattsville, Germantown and other nearby communities, highlighting the brand's existing footprint in the county. Area permit records maintained by WSSC and regional planning materials contain additional location details.
Dealmakers and Next Steps
Broad Street Realty is marketing Coral Hills and is listed as the leasing broker for the anchor space, with the property's site plan and tenant mix laid out in the firm's materials. Ownership and asset-management entries for the center appear in regional filings and property disclosures, and brokers say build-out and permitting typically follow a signed lease. See the center's site plan at Broad Street Realty and the listing on LoopNet for contact information.
Residents and county leaders will be watching closely to see whether New Grand Mart's arrival restores consistent access to fresh produce and international staples in the neighborhood. The lease announcement, circulated to industry readers, did not include a public opening timeline, and industry reporting notes that a projected opening date has not yet been disclosed. For now, the move represents a concrete step toward refilling a major grocery anchor in Capitol Heights.









