A shipping container in southwest Atlanta’s Pittsburgh Yards is now the country’s first container-based, 24-hour, AI-powered grocery store — and it sits on ground that was a UPS industrial lot two decades ago. Nourish + Bloom Market, founded by married couple Jamie and Jilea Hemmings, opened the location on June 25 with Mayor Andre Dickens, City Councilman Antonio Lewis, and representatives from AT&T cutting the ribbon on a store that has no cashiers, no checkout lines, and no staff on site.
“For far too long, families in this community had to leave their own neighborhood to buy groceries,” Dickens said at the opening. The store is the Hemmings’ fourth location and the second inside Atlanta city limits, following earlier openings in the Fayetteville suburb of Trilith and in Cascade Heights.
How The Store Works Without Staff
Customers enter through a mobile app linked to a payment method, pick items from shelves stocked with produce, prepared meals, and personal care products, and walk out. The AI-powered system handles inventory tracking in real time, manages contactless entry, and processes checkout automatically — no scanning, no waiting, no interaction with an employee required.
“When you come in our store, there’s no cashiers, no staff,” Jilea Hemmings has said of the model. “You’re literally able to scan in, grab what you want, and get back to your day.”
The Pittsburgh Yards location operates inside a modified shipping container, a format the Hemmings have identified as their most scalable and profitable store type. During their appearance on Season 15 of Shark Tank, Jilea projected 25% net margins on the container model — significantly higher than traditional grocery retail, where net margins typically fall between 1% and 3%. The container store is expected to employ two full-time and two part-time staff members and serve approximately 5,000 customers per month.
The distinction that separates Nourish + Bloom from other autonomous grocery concepts, including Amazon’s now-scaled-back Just Walk Out technology, is its acceptance of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits. The store became the first autonomous grocery in the United States to process SNAP Electronic Benefits Transfer cards in May 2025 — a technical and regulatory achievement that Amazon Go stores did not offer at their 2018 launch and only added selectively later. For a store located in a neighborhood where food access has been a documented gap, EBT acceptance is not a feature — it is the functional difference between serving the community and operating next to it.
Why Pittsburgh Yards Is The Location That Matters
The store’s address is as significant as its technology. Pittsburgh Yards is a 31-acre community-driven development at 352 University Avenue SW, built on a former UPS industrial brownfield acquired in 2006 by the Annie E. Casey Foundation. The site was designed from its inception as an economic equity project — not a standard commercial real estate play — with residents of surrounding Neighborhood Planning Unit V communities naming the development, influencing its design, and participating in tenant selection.
Since opening its first phase in December 2020, Pittsburgh Yards has housed more than 114 small businesses and nonprofit organizations across 101 private office suites, coworking spaces, and maker studios. The campus sits directly on the Atlanta Beltline’s Southside Trail, within two miles of Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport and minutes from Interstates 75, 85, and 20. The Container Courtyard — a consumer-facing retail cluster featuring ten businesses — was part of Pittsburgh Yards’ expansion plan, and Nourish + Bloom’s container store fits directly into that vision.
The surrounding Pittsburgh neighborhood and the broader NPU-V area — Adair Park, Capitol Gateway, Mechanicsville, Peoplestown, and Summerhill — have experienced decades of disinvestment. The 2022 closures of WellStar Atlanta Medical Center and its south campus removed the area’s only hospital access, and grocery options have remained sparse. Nourish + Bloom’s container format addresses the grocery gap with a model that can deploy faster and at lower capital cost than a traditional storefront buildout.
How Invest Atlanta and AT&T Funded The Expansion
The Pittsburgh Yards location was funded through two distinct channels. Invest Atlanta, the city’s economic development authority, awarded Nourish + Bloom an Economic Opportunity Fund Food Access Grant of up to $600,000 to build two container-based stores in underserved Atlanta neighborhoods — one at Pittsburgh Yards and one at an undetermined location on Campbellton Road in District 11. Separately, the company won an AT&T small business contest that provided additional capital and visibility.
The dual funding structure reflects a growing pattern in Atlanta’s approach to food access: public economic development dollars directed specifically toward grocery infrastructure in neighborhoods that traditional retailers have bypassed. The Invest Atlanta grant is tied to the same food-access mandate that underpins the Dickens administration’s broader Neighborhood Reinvestment Initiative, a $5.5 billion proposal aimed at addressing what the mayor has called “decades of intentional disinvestment” in south and west Atlanta.
What Comes After Pittsburgh Yards
The Hemmings have stated their intention to franchise the Nourish + Bloom model nationally. The container format is the vehicle for that expansion — standardized, modular, and deployable in parking lots, transit-adjacent sites, and commercial corridors without the permitting timeline or capital requirements of brick-and-mortar construction.
Beyond standalone stores, the company has expanded into AI-powered smart fridges deployed in corporate offices, stadiums, and hospitals — a secondary revenue line that extends the same frictionless technology into high-traffic environments where traditional food retail infrastructure does not exist.
The company’s trajectory from a single Fayetteville storefront to a four-location operation with franchising ambitions, an AT&T partnership, and city-backed grant funding has unfolded in roughly four years. Whether the container model can sustain 5,000 monthly customers per location and maintain the margins the Hemmings have projected will determine whether Nourish + Bloom remains an Atlanta story or becomes a national one.
For the residents of NPU-V, the more immediate question is simpler: whether the shipping container at Pittsburgh Yards means they can stop driving 30 minutes for groceries.




