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Wawa or Sheetz? A decision must be made

Loudoun County consumers will soon face a monumental decision between two choices that divide families, neighbors and friends.

Wawa or Sheetz? Sheetz or Wawa?

The popular convenience store/gas station chains — one headquartered in western Pennsylvania, the other in eastern Pennsylvania — tend to own their respective territories. You are a Wawa fan, or you are a Sheetz fan. You eat hoagies, or you eat subs.

But coming soon to Sterling, the two will be a stone’s throw away. A decision must be made.

Sheetz has submitted plans with Loudoun County to build a store on a vacant, 6.5-acre lot at Old Ox and Shaw roads, a block east of Route 28. It will sell cheap gas, of course, and ready-to-order subs, and it will have indoor and outdoor seating.

Nothing unusual for a Sheetz.

Except, the location happens to be 0.7 miles away from Old Ox and Oak Grove roads, where Wawa after a painfully long 2.5-year review.

A couple members of the Board of Supervisors, as they debated the Wawa application, mentioned that a Sheetz may locate nearby. They said it is not their place to decide where a business, or two businesses, should locate, so long as they meet the zoning requirements.

“Competition is healthy, and if you can’t compete you need to redefine your business,” Supervisor Ralph Buona, R-Ashburn, said during that early December meeting.

In Northern Virginia, the closest one finds a Wawa and Sheetz is in Prince William County. Wawa has a store in Gainesville, and Sheetz in Haymarket — 2.7 miles away (a nine-minute drive) via Route 55.

The Sterling Wawa and Sheetz will be less than a minute apart.

So, Washington Business Journal readers, when given the choice between Wawa and Sheetz, which will you choose?

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