Sustainable River Market development project booking tenants with virtual reality tours
June 23, 2017 | Meghan LeVota
Jonathan Arnold believes that choosing quality over quantity doesn’t have to break the bank.
In fact, he said it makes great business sense.
Arnold, principal at Arnold Development Group, is working to transform modern real estate development with a more sustainable future.
“At its heart, sustainable development means doing more with less,” Arnold said. “You can have a market rate return but also have sustainable and social benefits that are meaningful to people who are searching for purpose and wish to contribute to society with their investments.”
Arnold Development — which is one of two certified B-corps in Kansas City — is currently building a huge “passive house” in the River Market, which is slated to be completed in the spring of 2018.
With 16-inch concrete walls and triple-paned windows, the Second and Delaware project will reduce energy consumption by 70 to 90 percent, Arnold said.
With many months left of construction to go and 15 percent of units taken, Arnold has faith that many in the community will vote with their dollar and lease at Second and Delaware.
“We’re not asking people to pay more to go green,” Arnold said. “For a competitive price, people can rent at Second and Delaware and know that their carbon footprint will shrink.”
With a walkable location, low monthly utility costs, large windows, a pool, rooftop garden and other amenities — many people will have to see it before they believe it, Arnold said.
And now, they can, thanks to a high-tech offering.
Last month, Arnold Development opened a Second and Delaware leasing office a block away from the construction site in which prospective renters can visualize their future home via an interactive virtual reality experience.
The tech allows people to visualize a 360 panorama view of both the studio and one bedroom apartments. But it’s the two bedroom tour that takes the cake, Arnold said. Virtual tours of the two bedroom apartments enable users to wander around every corner of the space.
Arnold said there’s nothing else like this in Kansas City.
“This gives someone the ability to really kick the tires and understand the space,” Arnold said. “(The tech) can sense your height so you can walk to the shower and see how tall the showerhead is. You can go on the balcony, to the bedroom and this more closely resembles what walking through an already built unit would be.”
The VR experience was built by real estate marketing and consulting firm Arnold Imaging, a sister company to Arnold Development of which Arnold is also principal. Second and Delaware marks the fourth VR development project the firm has worked on. Previous clients include Dinerstein Companies, a national student housing developer.
In addition to the VR, the new leasing office features a replica of the kitchen that will come in every unit, complete with quartz counter tops. The leasing office also features a ceiling to scale at 10 feet and 6 inches and an example of the 16-inch thick walls.
“I think that our brains perceive so much through tactile experiences,” Arnold said. “The more we can marry immersive VR with real world experiences, the real and the virtual, the more powerful it is.”
Erin Walker, leasing consultant at Second and Delaware, said that offering VR facilitates the leasing process.
“As soon as they see the VR, they lease,” Walker said. “It’s truly one of a kind and to be able to give a tour of the building before it’s even built is amazing.”
Arnold said that the faster developers can lease units, the faster they will see a return on their investment. With the emergence of technologies such as VR, developments will begin to be rewarded for investing in quality, he said.
“If you’re leasing off of just a floor plan, you can’t really see the difference between two properties,” Arnold said. “(With VR,) you can see the ceilings and the countertops and the lights. Developers that are doing the right thing and want to do well for their tenants will be rewarded. Those who are cutting corners (during construction) will be forced out of the market.”
In the year ahead, Arnold Development will be focusing on completing the Second and Delaware project, Arnold said. But it won’t be long before the firm is ready to scale the sustainable housing model.
The firm is currently in the process of raising a $55 million fund. The Sustainable Development Fund is an equity fund which would allow Arnold to build similar models in walkable neighborhoods in Kansas City and along the east coast. Initially, Arnold said that he’s planning to build 1,500 units, with about half being built in Kansas City.
“We’re in discussions with multiple people who are very interested, right now is kind of the courting stage of getting to know each other,” Arnold said. “These are long-term relationships and this is a 15-year commitment. You want to make sure that you walk before you run with partners who will be with you for so long.”
Click here to read more about Second and Delaware apartments and its technology. For photos of the VR, check out the gallery below.

2017 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Mighty Handle grips massive market with Walmart deal
A Kansas City startup recently grabbed a retail deal that will put its product in front of millions of customers. Mighty Handle last week signed a deal with Walmart stores that will roll out its product to help users carry multiple shopping bags at about 3,500 stores nationwide. So what’s it mean for Mighty Handle…
High-tech car showroom parks in Crossroads
The days of pushy, plaid-suited car salesmen is over at a new dealership teeming with technology in Kansas City’s Crossroads Arts District. Luxury car dealer Pure Pursuit Automotive recently set up shop in one of Kansas City’s trendiest districts, incorporating such technology as holographic attendants and personal tablets. Those technologies and others aim to create…
Gallery: Lean Lab fellows set to disrupt KC education
Already improving education for about 2,400 area students, the Lean Lab recently set loose another group of innovators hoping to transform Kansas City education. The Kansas City-based education innovation incubator on Friday held its Launch Day, the culminating event of its incubator fellowship. The incubator conducted a five-week ideation program that assisted 10 fellows building…
Applications open for Missouri tech funding
Ready your typing fingers, entrepreneurs. The Missouri Technology Corporation recently opened applications for its IDEA Fund, a program that will match other capital investments in high-growth tech companies. The MTC, a public-private organization that makes investments in Missouri tech companies, is currently accepting applications for four of its IDEA programs, three of which are tailored…







