Nonprofit Village in Midtown aims to cut costs, attack basic needs for mission-based groups

April 12, 2018  |  Startland Staff

Nonprofit Village

An area investment firm has opened a new collaborative working space to help support Kansas City’s vast network of nonprofits.

Led by Jon McGraw and Mehgan Flynn, 31w31 investment group launched the Nonprofit Village, a 6,300-square-foot space at the recently-renovated historic building at 31 W. 31st St.

The village hopes to soothe the pervasive challenge that Kansas City’s more than 7,000 nonprofits face with high rent costs and access to basic business amenities, Flynn said.

“Jon McGraw and I have spent years leading and volunteering for nonprofit organizations and noticed that a lot of time at critical meetings is eaten up by conversations around basic needs — affordable office, meeting and event space,” Flynn said. “The idea behind the Nonprofit Village is to assist with capacity building, meeting the baseline needs of these organizations so they can focus their time and resources on fulfilling their respective missions.”

In addition to offering affordable office space with all-inclusive amenities, the Nonprofit Village will offer tenants an event space, conference room, open coworking loft, digital print station and storage. Virtual offices and meeting and event packages are also available.

Five nonprofits are already a part of the village, including Global and Multicultural Education, KC Jazz ALIVE, KIDZ Just Wanna Have Fun, Steps of Faith and GUILDit.

“We hope this community of nonprofits will find ways to collaborate with each other, share ideas and best practices to increase efficiencies,” Flynn added. “Before we were open we saw evidence of this just on our hard-hat tours. When two or more organizations toured together they almost always started asking questions about how the other handles a particular situation they were currently facing.”

There are thousands of nonprofits in Kansas City that can benefit from such a space, said Susana Bruhn, founder and executive director of GUILDit.

“An advantage of being at the Village is that beyond the coworking space, organizations can share ideas, resources, and services,” she said. “It fosters opportunities to learn and support each other, whether through casual conversations or collaborations.”

Prices vary from $150 per month for a drop-in pass to $600 per month for a private office that fits up to five people. For more information on office or event space information, contact Mehgan Flynn at info@31w31.org

Check out the space with the gallery below.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2018 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        autism behavioral therapy Pathfinder Health Services

        Behavioral health startup announces acquisition, name change

        By Tommy Felts | March 1, 2016

        Behavioral health tech firm ABPathfinder is blazing a new path thanks to a recent acquisition. In addition to a name change, the Overland Park-based firm announced Thursday that it purchased Phoenix-based Ensure Billing to beef up the company’s services. The new entity has rebranded to become Pathfinder Health Innovations. Acquiring an insurance billing company allows…

        New $20M fund supercharges VC dollars in Kansas City

        By Tommy Felts | February 29, 2016

        In conjunction with a metro-wide effort to boost the area economy, Kansas City will soon have a new co-investment fund that aims to accelerate early-stage businesses. As part of the KC Rising economic initiative, the “KC Rise Fund” hopes to improve a common gripe in Kansas City’s entrepreneurial community that there’s not enough capital to…

        Cut the crap: How to discern worthwhile advice

        By Tommy Felts | February 29, 2016

        In my early days as an entrepreneur, I ran into a lot of consultants who claimed to be “experts” and guaranteed they could help me out. Then I’d do some fact-checking and discover they were neither reliable nor experts, and their advice wasn’t worth the space in our email inboxes. In the last few years,…

        Kansas City is named No. 2 locale for women in technology

        Kansas City again named top tech locale for ladies

        By Tommy Felts | February 29, 2016

        Kansas City received more kudos for gender equality, this time for being a top spot for women in tech. A study released Wednesday puts Kansas City in second place among the nation’s 58 most-populated cities. The news arrives on the heels of Kansas City being named as a top-10 U.S city for women-owned businesses. SmartAsset…