Developers plotting innovation district sites in state capital as Go Topeka creates animal health, ag hub
June 29, 2020 | Startland News Staff
Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. This series is possible thanks to the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, which leads a collaborative, nationwide effort to identify and remove large and small barriers to new business creation.
TOPEKA — A pair of nationally recognized developers soon will begin testing the viability of two sites that could house a planned innovation district in Topeka.
Clark Enersen Partners and BioRealty, Inc. will lead the effort to analyze prospective sites in the city’s River South District and Kanza Education and Science Park, the GO Topeka initiative announced Monday.

The River South District is one of the areas that GO Topeka is currently reviewing as a potential location for the development of an innovation district. Stantec is currently working with the City of Topeka on an updated area-wide plan for the neighborhood.
“It’s exciting to take this crucial next step,” Duane Cantrell, chair of the Greater Topeka Partnership’s innovation advisory board, said in a release that highlighted progress to grow Topeka as a hub for animal health and ag tech — fueled largely by support from the Sunnyvale, California-based Plug and Play accelerator.
Plug and Play announced plans to establish a presence in Topeka — seen as a critical connection point within the midwest animal health corridor — in August 2019.
Click here to read more about the growth of Topeka’s startup and entrepreneurial ecosystem.
Findings are expected to be presented by the end of the year, GO Topeka said.
“These viability assessments will help us not only establish a first-rate innovation campus but will also allow Topeka to step out as a leader in animal health and ag tech innovation,” Cantrell added.
The progress is a show of Topeka’s commitment to establishing itself as a world class innovation hub, added Katrin Bridges, senior vice president of innovation at the Greater Topeka Partnership.
“Once we secured the Plug and Play Animal Health and Ag Tech Startup Accelerator program, it became our responsibility to devise a long-term strategy that supports the infrastructure of Topeka’s innovation scene,” Bridges said, noting such a goal requires finding the best possible setting to house the city’s innovation campus.
“The information yielded from the viability assessments will help us determine the right course of action to properly leverage our existing innovation assets, create new growth and, in turn, propel Topeka’s status as the hub of innovation in the Midwest.”
Cantrell said the benefits of such a district will be far reaching.
“This will not only benefit Topeka but our regional innovation partners as well. These partners will have the opportunity to utilize the campus’ state-of-the-art technology and lab space,” he said.

Potential innovation district site, Stantec
This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.
For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn
Featured Business

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Artist incubator paints scene of blissful collaboration in far-from-lonely West Bottoms space
Vanessa Lacy’s artist incubator eliminates “the lonely artist,” she said, noting her gallery model replaces solitude with creative relationships and a collaborative community. “Artists tend to get very isolated in their studio spaces working on their own; then they have a relationship with a gallery that’s really more of a business relationship,” said Lacy, owner…
Take the Kauffman survey: Is KC’s startup culture welcoming and inclusive to all?
Perception shapes reality, said organizers of a survey that seeks greater understanding of Kansas City’s startup culture. The Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation’s 2018 Entrepreneurship in Kansas City survey checks the pulse of the local entrepreneurial ecosystem by raising specific questions about culture and practice in workplaces across the metro, said John Quinterno and Julie Marks,…
Onward scores $1M grant from Chan Zuckerberg Initiative for payday loan end-run
Everyone needs a financial cushion, said Ronnie Washington — even a fintech startup offering low- to moderate-income workers a path to avoid predatory lending practices, the Onward founder said. A member of KC-based Fountain City Fintech’s inaugural cohort, Onward is one of 10 companies from across the U.S. and Puerto Rico being awarded $1 million…

