Pioneering KCI airport vote should help land top talent, startup leaders say
November 8, 2017 | Bobby Burch
Capping a six-year journey fraught with turbulence, delays and political drama, voters overwhelmingly ratified plans to build a new $1.3 billion airport terminal, which would replace the existing Kansas City International Airport (KCI).
“Kansas City has never been about being just mediocre,” said Michael Wilson, founder of luxury watch brand Niall and a frequent traveler at KCI. “This area was founded on and has been driven by pioneers. Look at how things should be instead of how they shouldn’t be. That’s what I think is important. … It’s the first place this city gets judged on and I believe a new world-class terminal will elevate this city to the next stage.”
Supporters of a new airport terminal snagged 75 percent of the vote — 49,949 in favor to 16,378 against — in a decisive statement that Kansas City is eager to replace its three horseshoe-shaped terminals built in 1972. Edgemoor Real Estate & Infrastructure will spearhead the development of the new terminal, which aims to be open in 2021.
Prognosticators anticipated a close vote, with vocal opponents maintaining that KCI’s layout offered the apex of convenience and that the new terminal plan would ultimately result in a steep bill to taxpayers, despite city assurances to the contrary. With a concerted effort led by Kansas City Mayor Sly James, support for a new terminal was rallied among civic leaders, economic development organizations and the business community to unite voters, attracting an overall turnout of about 20 percent among Kansas City, Missouri voters.
Among the loudest calling for a new airport terminal were members of Kansas City’s entrepreneurial community, whose ambitions eye an impact beyond the region.
An unattractive airport devoid of modern amenities has hampered Kansas City potential, said Darcy Howe, managing director of the KCRise Fund and an angel investor. Howe — whose fund is a part of the KC Rising economic growth initiative — said her work in economic development has revealed how hindering the dated airport can be.
It has particularly affected the region’s ability to attract top talent, Howe added. A new terminal should rectify that challenge, she said.
“A new KCI will be one more pillar demonstrating innovation and a contemporary view of our regional future,” Howe said. “As our entrepreneurial ecosystem grows, companies seeking talent will show applicants living elsewhere that from the moment they step off the plane an exciting future awaits. … I’m a believer in leaving the woodpile higher than you found it and future generations will benefit by this action of our citizens.”
KCI’s lack of direct flight options have limited Lesa Mitchell’s ability to bring in high-caliber mentors from the coasts to the Techstars KC accelerator, Mitchell said. Techstars KC welcomes 10 startups each year for a three-month, mentor-led program, which taps business leaders from around the world, she said.
A new airport terminal is going to help create a more valuable experience for the startups participating in the accelerator thanks to to more accessible mentors, she said.
“Fifty percent of the mentors for Techstars KC companies flew in from San Francisco, Boston and New York City to meet with Kansas City companies,” Mitchell said. “The only reason we ever have issues getting people to fly to Kansas City is the lack of direct flights. Since the majority of investors are located in those cities, and we have very few direct flights from those cities, it has been a big hurdle to overcome. The new airport will most likely solve this problem.”
Kansas City Mayor Sly James, who staked much of his mayoral legacy on the new terminal vote, was unsurprisingly thrilled with the vote’s result.
I’m SO DAMNED PROUD of #KansasCity !! Huge decision about our future!!
— Mayor Sly James (@MayorSlyJames) November 8, 2017
To learn more about the project, check out architectural renderings by SOM Architects below and read our FAQ here.
Featured Business

2017 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Digital Sandbox alum earns new round of funding — this time for sports tech; Meet the latest batch of just-funded startups
From making the college admissions process easier for students to summarizing books and podcasts using artificial intelligence, the latest startups to join Digital Sandbox KC are a great example of the creativity of this region’s entrepreneurs, said Jill Meyer. The four newly selected companies are expected to receive up to $20,000 in project funding and…
Her red sauce is dynamite but Ragazza’s owner gives the chef title to her Italian heritage
Family is baked into the core of Laura Norris’ restaurants, she shared, from the Italian recipes served at Ragazza in Westport to the brother-sister duo running the new Enzo Wine Bar and Bistro together in the River Market. She opened Ragazza, which now sits at the corner of 43rd and Main streets, in 2013 and…
How a ‘City Hall Swiftie committee’ is bringing joy (and business) to NKC as concert tour hits Arrowhead
The street lights are pointing in an arrowhead, leading Taylor Swift fans to North Kansas City where they can walk the iconic “Cornelia Street.” In June, North Kansas City Mayor Bryant DeLong announced that Swift Street in NKC was to be temporarily renamed Swift Street (Taylor’s Version) in honor of the artist coming July 7-8…
Former Independence mayor named interim executive director for LGBT Chamber
An interim leader was announced Thursday as the Mid-America LGBT Chamber of Commerce forms a search committee tasked with identifying the next full-time executive director for the Kansas City-based business advocacy group. Eileen Weir, who served as mayor of Independence, Missouri, from 2014 to 2022, takes on the interim role July 11 after the announcement…






