iWerx Gladstone to expand Northland coworking, incubator options in former racquetball club
July 3, 2018 | Tommy Felts
Two years after launching its sprawling flagship site in North Kansas City, a premiere coworking community is expected to debut iWerx Gladstone in late fall.
The two-story, 32,000-square-foot space — originally built as a racquetball club and renovated into a traditional office building in the mid 1980s — will be home to about 80 offices, a quadrant of retail opportunities, and eight community rooms, said iWerx partner Bob Martin. The 7001 N. Locust Dr. location will be the first dedicated coworking space and business incubator in Gladstone, he said.
“We’ve been interested in growing facilities to the north of us for the better part of the last year,” said Martin. “Gladstone materialized when the city came to us with an opportunity that made sense for our model and promises to advance our mission to spur more innovation, given its location and interested partners.”
iWerx Gladstone, with financial support via Missouri Chapter 100 Bonds, and in partnership with the City of Gladstone, will house the Clay County Economic Development Company’s offices, its sponsored business incubator, and the Northland Angel Investment Network.
“This is an incredible opportunity to expand on our burgeoning small-business community housed at iWerx, ” said Robert L. Curland, iWerx managing partner.
It’s all part of iWerx ongoing strategy to expand its brand of modern coworking, Martin said.
“We should expect to see more iWerx operations open — both standalone properties and with partners to support an entrepreneurial ecosystem — in the next couple of years, largely to the north of KCMO,” Martin said.
iWerx Gladstone joins the original North Kansas City location, as well as the new designWerx space a few blocks away.
When iWerx opened its first site in November 2016, it was the biggest coworking space in the metro at 33,000 square feet. Less than a year later, Plexpod Westport Commons and WeWork joined the scene, offering even bigger spaces in neighborhoods south of the river.
Yet iWerx remains a vital part of the startup ecosystem, said Dave Palmstein, managing partner of Birch Creek Capital, which manages the Northland Angel Investor Network.
From iWerx Gladstone, Birch Creek will have solid footing to advance its work, providing a six-phase development program for its portfolio companies to achieve their goals from idea to exit, he said.
“Our first two phases are similar to most incubators and accelerators. We then provide significant assistance building out infrastructure (Phase 3), expanding their sales and operations for Phase 4 (growth) and then replication/expansion in Phase 5,” Palmstein said. “Finally, Phase 6 is an exit for investors.”
The hands-on approach continues with Birch Creek then raising capital for the companies, he said.
“We follow this process for each portfolio company and having them physically near us at iWerx helps us facilitate communications and phased applications,” Palmstein said. “Although we are not quite ready to notify announce them, we are within 90 days of making major press releases regarding our expansion activities and how our portfolio companies will be involved. iWerx will house a number of these companies.”
Reservations are now being accepted for offices and memberships at iWerx Gladstone. For more information, email info@iwerx.org
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
WATCH: KCK-raised R&B artist emerges from the ruins of vulnerability to ‘touch people’s souls’
For Alanzo McIntosh Jr., exploring his voice means journeying through the KCK native’s roots, along with themes of self-doubt and self-discovery, and a deep connection to the struggles faced by Black and brown people across the globe — and here at home, he shared. “I wanted to make music that spoke to the soul and spoke…
Loud is in season: How one designer plans to yell their angrily sewn message during KC Fashion Week
Dustin Loveland channeled love — and anger — into a debut spring and summer collection that premieres soon at Kansas City Fashion Week 2023. “I’ve had to deal with a lot of anger from the past couple of years for a variety of reasons,” said Loveland, a non-binary freelance designer and sewer in Kansas City.…
They started their own businesses; now these young founders are widening the pipeline to entrepreneurship for their peers
Aidan Hall felt the support of Kansas City’s entrepreneurial ecosystem when he launched what would become KC Handmade Goods as an eighth grader, he said; years later, the young business owner is working to pay that feeling forward. An Iowa State freshman and Shawnee Mission West graduate, Hall got his start selling duct tape wallets…
Lay off costly corporate conferences: Jewell Unlimited touts mobile-first microlearning in minutes
A learning agency funded by William Jewell College is bringing a fresh approach to professional development, hoping to curate the “unregulated mess” of digital information into mobile-first microlearning modules that will empower workers and help them advance their careers. “Every single thing throughout human history that has ever been learned and codified, it’s already available…
