Plexpod Westport Commons exhumes obscured mural of Kansas City
August 16, 2016 | Bobby Burch
For an update on this piece, click here.
Amid the dust and drilling at the yet-to-be-open Plexpod Westport Commons is a little-known artistic gem for Kansas City.
At the heart of a project that marries history and innovation, the colossal coworking facility that was formerly Westport Junior High features a vibrant — albeit deteriorating — mural inspired by local painting legend Thomas Hart Benton.
Featuring Great Plains Indians, frontiersmen and the rise of industrialism, the “History of Kansas City” was painted by at least seven Kansas City students between 1948 and 1952.
In Benton’s abstract and “regionalist” style, the artwork relays a narrative that pre-dates Kansas City’s founding and — in linear fashion — concludes in 1952 when high-rise office buildings began dominating the Kansas City skyline. The mural spans more than 60 feet across three walls, jutting in and out of chalk- and cork-boards in what was a middle school classroom that laid to rot since 2010.
The mural, room and building itself, however, is now a part of a massive restoration and modernization project led by Plexpod founder Gerald Smith and the Sustainable Development Partners of Kansas City.
Gerald and his partners are revamping the historic, 160,000 square-foot middle school to become the largest coworking facility in the world, featuring more than 50 open “team spaces,” 40 offices and 200 flexible desks for rent. The gigantic project also will boast a business incubator, an event space, a maker’s studio, coffee shop and several meeting spaces — such as the one that will house “The History of Kansas City.”
But unlike its conference room counterparts, Smith said that he hopes the room featuring the artwork will serve as a distinguished meeting space for Kansas City.
“If tenants have a big pitch or meeting, this will be the space,” Smith said. “We’re going to make an incredible meeting space out of it.”
While the details are still unclear, Smith said that he invited a local historian to Westport Commons to analyze the mural, who helped research how the artwork came to be.
In 1948, Benton worked as an instructor at the Kansas City Art Institute. He apparently brought several of his students to Westport Junior High to either paint the mural themselves or perhaps work with younger students on the piece. Students signed their names along at least seven portions of the mural, which adopts elements of Benton’s style, such as muscular workingmen, agriculture, sweeping landscapes and regional history.
Check out the mural below in a video featuring Gerald Smith.
Featured Business

2016 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Kansas City legal startup returns with WeWork award, $18K
A co-founder of Kansas City-based Venture Legal is departing from Austin, Texas, on Wednesday with a little more coin in his pocket. Chris Brown traveled to Austin to pitch his company Venture Legal as a finalist for WeWork’s Creator Awards’ South Regional on Tuesday and delivered the winning video pitch in the “Incubate” category. Beating…
Revamped Sprint Accelerator graduates its first cohort of agriculture, digital tech startups
Now in its fourth year, the Sprint Accelerator on Tuesday held a demo day showcasing the seven companies in its 2017 cohort that recently graduated its program. The cohort represents the first graduating class for the corporate partnership-based accelerator program since it parted ways with Techstars, with which it conducted three years of programming. Thanks…
Steve Case to KC entrepreneurs, investors: You can’t sit back now
To nudge more Kansas Citians off of the sidelines and into its budding entrepreneurial ecosystem, former AOL founder Steve Case spoke Friday to a group of local investors at a luncheon. KCRise Fund managing director Darcy Howe hosted a fireside chat with Case for a crowd of investors, potential investors and entrepreneurs. Case told the…
Ginsburg: Fundamental — but routinely botched — elements of a winning pitch
Editor’s note: A five-year mentor at UMKC’s Regnier Institute for Entrepreneurship and Innovation, Byron Ginsburg has heard and counseled many entrepreneurial pitches as an attendee and a judge. His current UMKC mentees, Emily Moon and Kelsey Carlstedt of By Grace Design, won first place and $20,000 in the 2017 Regnier Venture Creation Challenge. While…
