International coworking firm WeWork taps Crossroads for big space
March 7, 2017 | Bobby Burch
WeWork, an international coworking firm with offices in 37 cities and 12 countries around the globe, is snagging four floors in Kansas City’s Corrigan Station for a new 40,000 square feet space.
With locations in Hong Kong, London, Buenos Aires, New York City and many others, the cosmopolitan coworking company will occupy the third through sixth floors at the recently rehabbed tower, which is the tallest building in the Crossroads Arts District. New York-based WeWork aims to host more than 750 members — from freelancers to small businesses — at the Kansas City location.
“WeWork is a platform for creators that provides the space, services and community that help people make a life, not just a living,” Adam Wacenske, general manager of WeWork’s southern region, said in a statement. “We’re seeing a macro shift in the way people work, one focused on finding meaning. Through WeWork, the people of Kansas City can have the opportunity to work and connect with a global community of more than 90,000 members, both in person at our beautiful workspaces and virtually through our member app.”
Located in five continents and such major U.S. metros as Seattle, Los Angeles, San Diego and others, WeWork’s arrival in Kansas City seems to add another feather to its entrepreneurial cap. Launched in 2010 with a mission to empower entrepreneurs, WeWork chose Kansas City for the metro’s cultural renaissance in the last five years and its enduring values of hospitality.
“Kansas City is fast becoming one of the most popular cities in the Midwest,” the firm said. “It’s one of those rare places where you can get the hustle-and-bustle of a metropolitan sprawl without sacrificing the neighborliness of the heartland. Folks here take great pride in where they’re from. … Kansas City has come a long way from its roots in agriculture and manufacturing. Today you’ll find companies from all industries laying the foundation for strong business.”
WeWork selected one of Kansas City’s most recently rehabbed historic buildings in the 10-story Corrigan Station. Located on the Kansas City Streetcar Line, the building features a creative and modern floor plan set amid 11-foot ceilings and huge windows for natural light. The 1921 building also will feature a restaurant, rooftop patio, energy efficient design and planned LEED certification.
Co-developed by Copaken Brooks and 3D Development, Corrigan Station is already nearly full of tenants, which include an architecture firm and insurance brokerage and retail tenants such as the Roasterie.
WeWork’s arrival represents what’s been a sustained coworking boom in Kansas City. More than 12 coworking spaces of varying sizes — from 3,000 to 160,000 square feet — call the Kansas City metro home.
The coworking space also prompts questions about if supply may be outpacing demand for coworking in the metro, which will soon see the opening of the world’s largest coworking space in Plexpod Westport Commons. Occupying a former middle school, Plexpod Westport Commons was developed by KC Sustainable Development Partners and will offer 160,000 square feet of space. iWerx in North Kansas City and Edison Spaces in Overland Park also recently opened their doors.
David Brain, a member of KC Sustainable Development Partners, previously said demand is growing in the metro and that given current trends, Kansas City needs about 500,000 square-feet of coworking space to accommodate independent workers. If that assessment is correct, the metro can still accommodate about an additional 150,000 square feet of coworking space.
Here are some examples of other WeWork spaces from around the United States.

2017 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
NetWork Kansas gets $3M Kauffman boost to build inclusive ecosystems across state
Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. This series is possible thanks to the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, which leads a collaborative, nationwide effort to identify and remove large and small barriers to new business creation. WICHITA…
LaunchKC grants competition gets boost toward relaunch with newly announced funding, MTC says
A popular grants competition that helped raise the profiles — and buoy the bank accounts — of dozens of Kansas City startups could be relaunching with renewed funding from the Missouri Technology Corporation, the agency announced Tuesday. LaunchKC was named one of seven organizations to together receive more than $1 million in grant funding to support…
Invest in small biz infrastructure, group urges city; They want $11M in KCMO budget for entrepreneur funding
Three years of working and waiting might be headed to an impasse for entrepreneur support advocates who’ve been lobbying the City of Kansas City, Missouri, for renewed — and dramatically enhanced — funding to boost startups and small businesses battered by the pandemic. “Everywhere we go, we’re asked ‘Kansas City is supposed to be the…
Celebrity crypto critic: Overhyped NFTs are just the free drink to lure you into the casino
Editor’s note: The following story is part of Startland News’ coverage of the SXSW conference in Austin. Click here to read more stories from the 2022 trip. AUSTIN — TV star and economist Ben McKenzie balked at the prospect of downloading a “free” NFT promoted by a vendor this week at SXSW — one of…



