The Intersection Convenience Store

The Intersection Convenience Store was a corporate chain of convenience stores that had over 60 stores spanning across G3 City. The first store opened in 1971 and the chain started in 1976. The chain ceased operations in November 2009 and all of the stores became 7-elevens, but some did not finish remodeling until sometime in 2011.

Its food is described as being superior and it was made locally by hand rather than on conveyor belts. It offered stuffed crust pizza and the dough used was made of pure bread. It was also the only store chain to serve licensed food from that of ATBW Store Cafe, though this only applied at certain locations.

History
The first convenience store was opened by Thomas Anderson (c. 1945 - 2006) on the corner of a stop light intersection in 1971 (hence its name). More stores began opening in 1976 and The Intersection was made to be a corporation of stores. The interior of the stores had red, yellow, green, and blue neon lights throughout the store, often put on beige colored wall panels. White tiles with red, yellow, green, and blue were also placed in the checkout area, as well as on the floor.

Foods that were served were quality pizza that was made by hand and never used artificial ingredients, and the pizza was described as being as good as Pizza Hut pizza. There was also stuffed crust pizza that was loaded with mozzarella cheese and there were different flavors of pizza to choose from. Cheeseburgers and sandwiches were also served in good quality, having grilled burger patties instead of fried, and a box of French Fries were also served in quality condition that was never cold or soggy. Butter popcorn and cheese popcorn were also served in good quality and a butter machine was also in many stores beside the Icee maker and soda machine to add butter to popcorn.

Closure
On November 3, 2009, the corporation had ceased operations and closed all of their 64 operating stores. All of these stores were sold to 7-Eleven on November 6, 2009 and renovation and rebranding as 7-Eleven was completed in just four weeks. The stores reopened as 7-Elevens on December 8 and December 12, 2009, effectively putting an end to nearly 40 years of the chain. Even though 7-Eleven stores are usually franchises, these stores ran as corporate stores for some time, but some owners did buy them.

Even before ceasing operations, the owner of The Intersection had planned to end the chain because of financial troubles from the 2008 financial crisis and an increase of 7-Elevens that rose up. The owner's sons who took control of the chain had planned to sell it to 7-Eleven since as earlier as at least 2007.