Fruiggie Too! Audubon Coming Soon: Smoothies, Juices and Bowls

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Headline: Fruiggie Too Lands on Marlton Pike in Audubon — A Fresh Pit Stop for I-295 Commuters and Neighbors

By Ari Williams — 295Times

A health-forward quick-serve spot called Fruiggie Too is coming soon to the Marlton Pike corridor in Audubon, and for residents and drivers who use the I-295 exits that serve Camden County, it’s the kind of small business that quietly changes a stretch of road.

What’s opening
Fruiggie Too bills itself as a place for smoothies, cold-pressed juices, and acai bowls made with fresh ingredients — the grab-and-go menu that fits workday commutes, after-school routines, and the morning rush out of the suburbs. The announcement originally surfaced through community food-and-development blogs and local social channels; readers who want hours and the exact storefront are best served by checking the shop’s listing on Google Maps or its social pages once the team makes them public.

Why Marlton Pike matters
Marlton Pike is one of those long South Jersey commercial corridors that runs through multiple towns and links local neighborhoods to the larger highway network. For Audubon, the Pike functions as a main-street-through-suburb — a place where small retailers, service businesses, and eateries cluster and feed both local foot traffic and drivers stopping off from nearby highways.

That corridor-friendly profile is exactly why a concept like Fruiggie Too fits here. It doesn’t rely on destination dining; it serves quick, health-minded options that work for office workers, parents, students, and commuters on I-295 looking for a better alternative to fast food. In other words, Fruiggie Too is the kind of business that responds to changing consumer patterns — healthier, faster, and more convenient — which we’ve been seeing across Camden County and the wider 295 corridor.

Location and community context
Fruiggie Too’s Audubon location sits on Marlton Pike in a mixed commercial-residential area where small storefronts and strip malls share space with neighborhood homes. That mix matters for impact: a business like this can bring more walking customers during the day, give nearby retailers an extra reason for visitors to linger, and provide a lunchtime alternative for employees at offices nearby.

For drivers using I-295 who exit into Audubon or nearby towns, the Pike is a familiar connector. Adding a fresh food option on that route supports the subtle shift in corridor amenities — from legacy diners and sandwich shops to grab-and-go fresh concepts — and can help keep local dollars circulating in the borough rather than getting spent at malls further afield.

How this fits local trends
Across South Jersey, smaller chains and independent concepts focused on healthy eating have been filling in retail vacancies and diversifying dining strips. That trend matters because commercial strips like Marlton Pike are often the first places residents notice when a neighborhood is adapting to new demand — healthier fast-casual, more takeout-friendly kitchens, and cafes that work for remote workers and students.

Fruiggie Too also ties into another local trend: the drive-time economy. With many Audubon residents commuting to Philadelphia, Camden County job centers, or the I-295 corridor itself, businesses that offer fast, wholesome options for breakfast and lunch fill a real need. If the Audubon location can pick up steady weekday traffic from families and commuters, it could become an anchor for midday foot traffic on that block.

What neighbors want to know
– Hours and exact address: Check Google Maps for the most up-to-date location, hours, and reviews once the shop lists them. That’s also where you’ll find parking notes and transit directions if you’re coming off I-295.
– Community reaction: Local review platforms like Yelp and neighborhood pages on Patch and Facebook are good places to see early reactions once the doors open. For now, announcements and previews suggest local curiosity and support for more healthy options on the Pike.
– Other effects: Keep an eye on how the opening affects neighboring small businesses. A successful grab-and-go spot can drive more lunchtime traffic to nearby shops — or raise expectations around storefront activation and maintenance.

Why it matters for 295Times readers
We cover towns and exits because small changes on familiar corridors matter: a new storefront on Marlton Pike changes daily routines, offers new jobs, and nudges the neighborhood’s commercial mix. For anyone using the I-295 exits that feed into Audubon, this is a practical addition — a place to pick up a quick, healthier bite without detouring to a larger shopping center.

If you’re passing through or live nearby, Fruiggie Too is worth noting as an early sign of the kind of retail refresh we’re watching along the Marlton Pike corridor. I’ll be tracking opening details, hours, and community response; readers can follow up on the shop’s Google Maps listing, local Patch/NJ.com coverage, and neighborhood review pages for the latest.

Have you seen the new storefront on Marlton Pike or already tried Fruiggie Too elsewhere? Email tips@295times.com or drop a note in the comments to share what you’ve noticed — where you stop when you get off I-295 matters more than you think.

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