Housing trends show young professionals don’t care about Troost’s stigma, UC-B says
October 18, 2017 | Tommy Felts
Lance Carlton initially was skeptical of developing east of Troost Avenue, he said.
“But the mentality of the market has changed,” said Carlton, co-managing partner of UC-B Properties, which brought its offices to the 4300 block of Troost in August 2016.

The company helped prove an appetite for residential development on the corridor with 19 new single family homes in the Beacon Hill neighborhood, which has Troost at its western border.
Residents are coming back from areas surrounding the urban core, and many of them are young professionals, said John Hoffman, Carton’s father-in-law and co-managing partner of UC-B Properties.
“Over the years, it has proven that this new generation of people don’t care about the stigma of Troost,” Hoffman said, referencing the corridor’s reputation as the city’s economic and racial barrier.
The team is partnering with Milhaus, an Indianapolis-based developer, to again test that theory with a $24 million, 185-unit, market-rate residential project at 27th Street and Troost.
“We know the location, and we know who we think the kind of renter might be here. So we want to try to keep this on the more affordable side,” said Brad Vogelsmeier, director of development at Milhaus. “Obviously, there are a lot of apartments being built or rehabbed in Kansas City right now, some more expensive than others. Our goal is to right-size this, and still build a nice, new, class-A type unit, but without as big of a price tag as you might find downtown, on the Country Club Plaza or other places. That’s not the location that Troost is. It’s not the renter who wants to be over here.”
Check out the rest of Startland’s six-part series on new development on Troost Avenue, a historic racial and economic barrier in Kansas City.
Part I: Transforming Troost
Part II: Troost Coalition
Part III: Wonder lofts
Part V: Food startup Village
Part VI: Troost Collective
The project is a combination of seven, three-story, walk-up buildings featuring a mix of studio, one- and two-bedroom apartments, Vogelsmeier said.
“We’re smart enough to realize that on these bigger projects, we need more manpower, more equity,” Carlton said of partnering with Milhaus on 27th and Troost. “And we have the same vision, both from where to develop and in their aesthetics and design. They really value architecture. It’s not like we’re going to design a building and then take that design and use it in 20 different locations. That’s what they do out in the suburbs.”
Kansas City residents value historic neighborhoods and walkability, Carlton and Hoffman said, which they hope is reflected in the intentionality of the project’s design, which came from Kansas City’s Draw Architects. The goal is to blend the look and feel of 27th and Troost into the surrounding community, including Beacon Hill.
The development includes 10,000 to 12,000 square feet of commercial space, which UC-B and Milhaus agree would be best suited for a specific neighborhood asset.
“As the population grows, we’re going to need more services,” Carlton said. “If we can get a grocery store, it becomes such a value add, especially when you’re on Troost.”
Clemons Real Estate has been tasked with finding the right tenant operator who could make the concept work, he said. Ideally, that would include a market-style retail operation coupled with a coffee shop, he said.
While the search for that perfect grocery store remains ongoing, the amount of development on the corridor should help Clemons make the case for 27th and Troost, Audrey Navarro, managing partner at the boutique style real estate firm, said. The area has seen significant reinvestment just in the past two to three years, she said.
“There is a real demand for people who want to live and work in an urban environment,” Navarro said.
Check out the rest of Startland’s six-part series on new development on Troost Avenue, a historic racial and economic barrier in Kansas City.
Part I: Transforming Troost
Part II: Troost Coalition
Part III: Wonder lofts
Part V: Food startup Village
Part VI: Troost Collective
Featured Business

2017 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
How a KC partnership helped Idle Smart avoid a cold start that could’ve stalled its recovery
Editor’s note: The following story is sponsored by Academy Bank, a Kansas City based community bank, and is part of a series of features spotlighting some of the bank’s startup and small business partners. Wasted time is wasted money — a notion at the forefront of Idle Smart, a Kansas City IoT tech company built…
This KC kombucha brewer brought back North America’s most mysterious tropical fruit; the time to taste it is ripe now
When the forest starts to smell like bananas, it means the pawpaws are ready for harvesting, Amy Goldman shared. “I’d never heard of pawpaws until last year when one of our farmer friends brought us a bunch of them. We tried them in our kombucha, and it sold out so fast. It was incredible. But…
A service you never knew you needed: Buying chickens from a vending machine at the Mayor’s Christmas Tree
As children gave life to the ice terrace above Friday, volunteers and shoppers were giving light to local and global charities at a newly placed installation of vending machines — stocked with donation opportunities, not snacks — at Crown Center. The hottest “selling” item so far in Kansas City: a trio of chickens for $18. Three Giving…
New nonprofit surprises first-ever $20K ‘changemaker’ grant winner; he already knows how he’ll invest it
Pastor Adrian Roberson was initially too stunned to speak Thursday when he was awarded a $20,000 grant for KC United — a youth sports initiative he co-founded in 2009 with his wife Vicky. But the duo already have plans for the money: spreading blessings. “I want to say, ‘Glory to God,’” Adrian Roberson shared moments after…

