Boulevardia cancels 2021 music, maker festival; awaiting full COVID comeback before summer party’s return

March 16, 2021  |  Startland News Staff

Boulevardia 2022 02

One of Kansas City’s premier summertime events — and the first major local festival canceled because of the pandemic in 2020 — won’t be back this June after all, organizers announced Tuesday.

“When the decision was made last year to cancel Boulevardia, we said, ‘The comeback is always stronger than the setback.’ This statement has been at the heart of our conversations as we planned for the 2021 event,” Boulevardia organizers said in a message to supporters.

The event is now expected to return June 17-18, 2022.

Click here to learn more about the multi-faceted Boulevardia festival, which includes concerts, a sprawling market, food, beer and more.

Although COVID-19 vaccination availability is beginning to surge across the country and some municipalities are relaxing restrictions on gatherings, the timing still isn’t quite right for a jump back to “normal” for Boulevardia — at least not at the level of quality organizers and summer revelers expect from the event, the statement read.

“Great strides have been made to overcome COVID-19 as a community. But we’ve decided that moving forward with a festival this June would not allow us to put on the BEST Boulevardia the way we all know and love,” organizers said.

Kansas City’s most recent COVID-19 restrictions were updated March 12 and run through at least May 1.

Click here to read the KCMO’s 13 amended emergency order.

Scant details about plans for 2021 Boulevardia had been released to the public ahead of Tuesday’s announcement.

In 2020, the festival had been planned along Grand Boulevard at Crown Center, where it had been expected to move this summer after six years in the Kansas City Stockyards District in the West Bottoms. The two-day “urban street festival” was set to feature music, makers, food and brews.

“When Boulevardia comes back, we want it to be the best celebration possible for our citizens, artists, partners, staff, and the entire Kansas City community,” organizers said in announcing the 2021 cancelation. “With that in mind, we’re focusing our efforts on ensuring our 2022 pop-up party nation is the best one yet. Boulevardia will be back when ALL of you can join us.”

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

      2021 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        First he got the park clean, then his brother; New theater explores how Chris Harris played through the hazards

        By Tommy Felts | May 5, 2023

        Five years after opening a golf course in the Ivanhoe neighborhood to help revitalize his community from within, Chris Harris is taking a swing at the east side’s theater desert. Harris — the owner and operator of Harris Park Midtown Sports and Activity Center and lifelong neighborhood resident — has now built an indoor theater…

        Donald Hawkins, KC Collective; STARTLAND's Innovation Exchange

        Former KC startup acquired by Atlanta-based banking platform, uniting two of the largest Black-owned fintechs

        By Tommy Felts | May 5, 2023

        ATLANTA — Greenwood, a digital banking platform for Black and Latino individuals and businesses, announced this week its acquisition of Kansas City-founded Kinly — a neobank building generational wealth for Black America. The deal will help grow Atlanta-based Greenwood’s ecosystem of more than 1 million members and provide Kinly’s community of more than 300,000 with…

        Industrial coworking space eyes downtown KC; plans mixed office, warehouse amenities

        By Tommy Felts | May 5, 2023

        A Northwest Arkansas-based startup plans to bring a new coworking concept to Kansas City this year — one that combines flexible office and shared warehouse solutions, said CEO Brendan Howell. “We call it industrial coworking,” explained Howell, co-founder and CEO of Loloft . “That’s a term that we’ve coined.” The company is aiming for a…

        ‘Proud capitalist’ to young social entrepreneurs: It’s OK to make a buck while saving the world

        By Tommy Felts | May 3, 2023

        Darcy Howe encouraged budding, would-be founders to think about ways they can effectively scale their mission-driven ideas, drawing on KCRise Fund’s model for social entrepreneurship. “Being socially mission-driven is not mutually exclusive to making money,” Howe, founder and managing director of KCRise Fund, told Enactus students gathered Tuesday during an end-of-year celebration for the University…