Investing in the arts earns KC designation as UNESCO’s only ‘City of Music’ in US
March 27, 2018 | Leah Wankum
Landing on a United Nations agency’s City of Music list reflects more than Kansas City’s century-old link to American jazz, said Jacob Wagner.
“This designation is a recognition of our investment and commitment to music, arts and creativity as a driver of urban economic development,” said Wagner, faculty director of the Center for Neighborhoods at the University of Missouri-Kansas City.
UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) coordinates international cooperation in education, science, culture and communication, according to its website. Established in 2004, UNESCO’s Creative Cities Network recognizes cities that identify creativity as a strategic factor for sustainable urban development, according to the organization. Such creative fields include crafts and folk art, design, film, gastronomy, literature, music and media arts.
Kansas City joins a network of 180 cities in 72 countries across the world, Wagner said, noting Kansas City is the only U.S. city on the list.
An associate professor of urban planning and design at UMKC, Wagner credited Kansas City’s investment over the past 30 years in the creative economy, as well as the infrastructure for the arts, as keys factor in earning the designation.
The city allotted $7 million in 2016 for improvements to the jazz district at 18th and Vine streets, and is also home to more than a dozen piano bars and jazz rooms.
Further evidence that Kansas City’s jazz culture is still alive and well emanates in the Mutual Musicians Foundation, a nearly 100-year-old organization established and operated by local African-American musicians, Wagner said. The Mutual Musicians Foundation is still housed in the same building where it began, 1823 Highland Avenue, which was designated as a national historic landmark in December 1981, he added.
Joining the Creative Cities Network builds on Kansas City’s momentum to increase international tourism and press coverage, Wagner said. It also links the city to other municipalities involved in fostering the arts, as well as connecting local professionals in arts, music and sustainable development with like-minded professionals in those sister cities, he said. Kansas City’s prime sister cities in the network include: Seville, Spain; Morelia, Mexico; and Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo.
“It gives us a framework, really, of international collaboration for work we’re already doing — not just limited to the arts, but also including sustainable development,” Wagner said. “That’s a big focus of UNESCO, is balancing economic growth with environmental stewardship and sustainability.”
Some of the projects already implemented in Kansas City include a climate action plan and collaborative efforts to increase diversity and inclusion, especially concerning the city’s digital divide, Wagner said. Kansas City’s digital equity plan, coupled with efforts to further affordable housing goals, was central to the city’s successful nomination, he added.
“Conserving and adaptively re-using the historic urban environment contributes to the quality of life of [Kansas City] inhabitants in many ways,” UNESCO said in a statement. “In addition to strengthening their sense of belonging, social cohesion and providing a pleasant environment, it also mitigates excessive urbanization, attracts tourists and visitors as well as investments, while providing for green, locally-based, stable and decent jobs.”
Achieving the designation was a “team effort” among Kansas City, Missouri, officials, including Mayor Sly James and Mayor Pro Tem Scott Wagner, Wagner said.
“We’re just getting started, so people who are interested are welcome to contact [UMKC’s] Center for Neighborhoods to learn more and to get involved,” Wagner said.
Kansas City will join other city members of the Creative Cities Network at its next annual meeting, slated for June in Poland, Wagner added.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Digital divide initiative could help 9,000 Kansas City households
More than 9,000 Kansas City households are among the potential beneficiaries of a new national digital divide initiative. Comcast recently partnered with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s ConnectHome initiative, marking the largest expansion to Comcast’s Internet Essentials program. Now all Kansas City households within a Comcast service area that receive HUD housing…
New Startland reporter wants to immerse herself in KC’s culture of innovation
Two months ago today, I packed up the last of my belongings in my Columbia, Mo. apartment. And to be frank, I was slightly embarrassed to be moving back in with my parents in Independence, Mo. A recent graduate from the University of Missouri’s School of Journalism, it seemed that almost everybody I knew was…
Exclusive: John Fein departing Techstars to lead new $7M Midwest venture fund
After three years with the Kansas City-based Sprint Accelerator, John Fein is moving on to lead a venture fund that has ambitious Midwestern plans. Fein, who’s served as the managing director at the Techstars-led accelerator since 2014, will serve his last day with the organization on July 31. With decades of fast-paced startup experience, Fein…
Mid-America Angels set for second consecutive record-breaking year
The Mid-America Angels is poised to make 2016 a record-breaking year. The area investment group already has deployed $1.7 million via seven deals in the first six months of 2016, setting pace for its biggest year of investment in its ten-year history. In 2015, the firm set a record for its amount of capital deployed,…
