Five-chef food hall concept headed downtown thanks to one of KC’s most successful founders

February 21, 2020  |  Austin Barnes and Tommy Felts

Strang Hall, Edison District, Overland Park

Serial entrepreneur Tim Barton is bringing his “chef collective” concept from downtown Overland Park to the heart of KCMO, the founder of Edison District announced Thursday, teasing the first details of a new development at the in-progress Lightwell building.

Tim Barton, Edison District

Tim Barton, Edison District; STARTLAND’s Innovation Exchange

“It’ll be a 13,500 square-foot food hall with five chef concepts,” Barton, whose Johnson County Strang Hall project serves as the template for the project at Lightwell, said from the stage Thursday at STARTLAND’s Innovation Exchange.

Click here for more on the Innovation Exchange event, which explored Ecosystem Building in the 2020s. STARTLAND, formerly the Kansas City Startup Foundation, is the parent organization of Startland News.

Click here to read more about the Lightwell project.

Described as a “magnet” within such mixed-use developments as Lightwell, the food hall concept helps developers bring “energy and life” to contemporary building projects that combine business and lifestyle trends, Barton said. Additionally, a sports books amenity — mimicking similar facilities in Las Vegas but without illegal betting — is expected to be incorporated into the concept as it develops.

Strang Hall is a casual, modern space within Barton’s Edison District project that is designed as  a launching point for food entrepreneurs to showcase their skills and provide true authentic chef-driven experiences.” Boasting six chefs and food concepts, the 13,000 square-foot Strang Hall opened in late 2019 and has doubled the number of truly chef-driven, locally sourced restaurants in Johnson County, Barton touted.

The name of the new “chef collective” project at Lightwell, along with a timeline for its completion, were not immediately announced by Barton Thursday, but construction on the project is already in the works as a full remodel of the Lightwell building continues.

The former CEO of Freightquote, who saw a $365 million exit for the company in 2014 before launching Edison Factory and such ventures as Edison Spaces, Edison District and Menlo Food Labs, said the concept is not expected to stop with downtown Kansas City. The serial entrepreneur works to scale the Strang Hall model into new markets.

“We have pitches with developers around the country who want authentic restaurants, but they can’t handle the risk of, ‘Well, maybe this guy’s gonna flame out,’” Barton said of the role he plays in the concept — which sees a central entrepreneur, like himself, taking responsibility for the facility and leasing space to chefs on a short-term basis. 

Darcy Howe, KCRise Fund, and Tim Barton, Edison District; STARTLAND's Innovation Exchange

Darcy Howe, KCRise Fund, and Tim Barton, Edison District; STARTLAND’s Innovation Exchange

“Chefs are really great at being chefs, but they’re not great business people,” he said of risks for restauranteurs. 

“We’ve built a development company around solving where we own the business and the back office, so the real estate folks don’t feel worried about signing contracts,” he explained, noting most bankers are at ease doing business with a serial entrepreneur — especially one who’s sold a company for more than $300 million, joked Darcy Howe, managing director of KCRise Fund and moderator of a discussion on ecosystem building Thursday that featured Barton.

 Click here to read more about Tim Barton’s philosophy on business and work ethic.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

2020 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Venues Made Simple vows to marry transparency with streamlined wedding planning tech

    By Tommy Felts | September 5, 2023

    Jeff and Jessie Pavalone didn’t intend to plan their wedding during a pandemic.  The Kansas City couple is introducing technology to the wedding industry with their new Airbnb-style venue management system, meant to simplify wedding planning for both couples and event spaces. Click here to explore their Digital Sandbox KC-backed startup, Venues Made Simple. The…

    Family serves tender tradition at Kitty’s Cafe with KC’s most famous pork sandwich

    By Tommy Felts | September 5, 2023

    Nestled along 31st Street between Kansas City’s Midtown and east side neighborhoods, Kitty’s Cafe has become a cherished symbol of timeless comfort recipes and enduring family heritage, said Jenna Soulivong. It’s word-of-mouth popularity spread largely from Kitty’s pork tenderloin sandwich — a menu item that that earned the restaurant recognition from The New York Times…

    Headline-grabbing entrepreneurs join ScaleUP! KC on their way to ‘that next tier’

    By Tommy Felts | September 4, 2023

    Twenty of Kansas City’s most promising young companies — including the KC Chamber’s “Emerging Business of the Year” — are among the latest cohort of ScaleUP! Kansas City, the metro’s longest running program for growth-minded entrepreneurs with scaling businesses. ScaleUP! Kansas City companies receive coaching, perspective and connections to scale, create new jobs, open new…

    Kansas City startup among leading fintech finalists in NXTSTAGE competition

    By Tommy Felts | September 4, 2023

    An AI-infused startup led by Kansas City serial founder Jannae Gammage is poised to compete against seven other finalists in this fall’s NXTSTAGE innovation showcase in Wichita. Foresight — a fintech platform that aims to open funding opportunities for underserved borrowers by assessing credit risk, fraud and biases — was selected as finalist for the…