Social entrepreneur’s Harris Park brings green and golf to blighted urban neighborhood

November 30, 2018  |  Elyssa Bezner

Harris Park

A clean green park with an award-winning golf course not only raises the profile of the Ivanhoe neighborhood at 40th and Wayne — it changes the mindset of those who live there, said Chris Harris.

The space — completed in August— was chosen by the American Society of Golf Course Architects for its Design Excellence Recognition Program list, said Harris, owner and operator of the Harris Park Midtown Sports and Activities Center. Harris also is one of the winners for the 2019 Urban Hero award, to be celebrated at a Jan. 23 reception in the Grand Ballroom at the Kansas City Convention Center.

A house in the area recently went on the market for $120,000 this year, Harris noted, a previously unheard of figure for the Ivanhoe community.

“It sends a signal that we can have nice things,” he said. “A lot of times, when I was growing up in neighborhood, I didn’t understand what was going on [with the empty] and abandoned houses and people dumping trash. I [was] outside playing basketball and football in dirty lots.”

After buying a plot in the late 1990s and developing the park and basketball court, Harris laid out its programming with a singular goal — to use sports as a catalyst to teach youth the basics of life, he said.

“I would say that 95 percent of what I’m doing is educational and five percent is sports,” he added. “It’s just all about cleaning up our community. When you clean up blighted land, that’s educational in itself.”

Maintaining the golf course — which involves cutting the grass every three days — is causing a shift in focus for Harris in the coming year, he said, noting the adult and youth programming need more structure.

“We want to make sure that when we are opening these doors for people to come play golf, [we have rules in place for] things to move smoothly,” said Harris. “If we don’t put in a great plan to get things to go smoothly, people won’t come back.”

It was all truly a grassroots program, he added, noting that bringing in key partnerships — like Missouri Golf Hall of Famer Frank Kirk, Big Brothers Big Sisters, the YMCA, Truman Medical Center and more — alleviated the stress of building a full golf course without early capital, he said.

“It’s just been a lot of major corporations that rallied around to help me get this thing up and going,” said Harris. “I’ve been carrying this thing for a very long time just on [$45,000 a year]. I just did what I could do and I wasn’t trying to do no more, no less. Just because you have a modest salary, you still can clean up your neighborhood. That’s the truth.”

“I really truly believe that this model could work in every urban neighborhood throughout the United States,” he added.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

2018 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Cosmo Burger brings its mouth-watering tots, boozy milkshakes to East Crossroads’ bustling streets of eats

    By Tommy Felts | July 3, 2025

    Bringing Cosmo Burger to the Crossroads required cousins Atit and Jugal Patel to cook their plans to perfection, serving up the brand’s first full-service brick-and-mortar location after years of trial by griddle. The result: a beefed up version of the owners’ original concept in one of the city’s most popular dining and entertainment districts. “This…

    Independence day: Flipping from side-hustle to full-time requires grind behind glory 

    By Tommy Felts | July 3, 2025

    Founders found freedom in the journey (but they’re grateful for what they didn’t know was ahead) Jason Taylor walked away from big tech for good in January — leaving behind a dream résumé that included a long engineering career at Microsoft, then Google, for the freedom to pursue what had once been just a passion…

    Family history, franchise model help second-chapter entrepreneur jump business obstacles

    By Tommy Felts | July 3, 2025

    Throughout his career as a car salesman and mortgage broker, Brad Staples felt a calling toward entrepreneurship, he said. And when those industries ran dry, the Missouri native realized it was time to try on a familiar hat: running a family business. His venture, USA Ninja Challenge — a franchise kids’ fitness gym inspired by…

    ‘America the Entrepreneurial’: Can builders restore the promise of ‘the most courageous startup the world has ever seen?’ 

    By Tommy Felts | July 3, 2025

    Risk-takers set the story of the United States of America in motion, said Victor W. Hwang, lamenting a modern day reality where needless barriers too often work against entrepreneurs and young businesses. An upcoming milestone birthday for the nation offers a focal point for restoring a coast-to-coast commitment to supporting builders and dreamers, he said,…