Legacy Skates rolls beyond fads; neighborhood skate shop laced with roller derby expertise

May 26, 2021  |  Austin Barnes

Annie Powell and Luke Powell, Legacy Skates

Luke and Annie Powell’s skate shop in Westside South isn’t just a way to make ends meet; it’s a legacy-building endeavor, deeply rooted in family.

And it got its start with a childhood wish.

Legacy Skates is a brick and mortar skate shop with a competitive edge: its robust in-store and online inventory.

The shop boasts a wide selection of roller skates, inline skates, protective gear and accessories from Kansas City’s Westside South neighborhood, 2601 Madison Ave.

Click here to explore Legacy Skates.

“I wanted a pair of inline speed skates,” Luke Powell recalled, noting his 1990s dream came affixed with a ridiculous price tag.

“We lived in a trailer park. We really couldn’t afford cool stuff,” he continued. “My dad was like, ‘Oh, you’re never going to do this. It’s not going to be a part of your life. You’re going to use them for a week and throw them away.’”

His father’s initial dismissive reaction — doubt based in parental realism — resonated with Powell, setting in motion a life lesson that pushed him to keep dreaming beyond his circumstances. 

“I just remember in my head saying, ‘I’m going to prove you wrong,’” he recalled, highlighting his determination and childlike stubbornness, which ultimately took him (and the pricey set of skates he managed to secure) gliding down a path of team skating, into the world of roller derby, and ultimately as a jammer of corporate product sales for major skate brands. 

“My wife was a sponsored [roller derby] athlete. … I met her through roller skating. My daughter wouldn’t be around if I wouldn’t have met my wife,” he said, noting the impact the skating community has had on his life and things he’s likely to have missed out on if he hadn’t pursued his passion — including a shot at entrepreneurship. 

Powell and his wife Annie — who herself competed as Anne Maul — opened their small skate shop, Legacy Skates, in the Crossroads Arts District in fall 2019; their way of giving back to a burgeoning skating community that’s given them everything, he said. 

Legacy Skates

Legacy Skates

“Legacy Skates was started as more of a way to support our local roller derby community,” Powell explained, detailing the competitive world of roller derby and its roots as a space to empower women. 

Luke Powell

Luke Powell

“We wanted to create an environment that was not only welcoming, but knowledgeable [and that] allowed [athletes] to have a storefront they could walk into, centrally located in Kansas City.”

Click here to learn more about Legacy Skates or to shop online.

From gear to wheels, bearings, and toe stops, Legacy Skates is stocked with anything and everything novice skaters and professional athletes need to reach their goals or to best enjoy their hobby. 

And it set its wheels across the starting line at just the right time, Powell added. 

“Anytime during a downturn or a recession, rollerskating does really well. It’s a form of cheap entertainment and — normally — people who are having a hard time can head to their local roller skating rink and walk in the door with a $20 bill and have their kids stay all day long,” he explained. 

“When COVID hit, everything closed down and that’s when the panic button [was] hit. All of the companies, skate shops, roller rinks around the country were on hold. We didn’t know what COVID was really going to draw.”

Optimism eventually rounded the rink even with stay-at-home restrictions and entertainment outlets shuttered, as bored Kansas Citians ventured outdoors and were in sudden need of blades, skates, and boards — a welcome whip for Powell who was eager to meet their needs. 

Legacy Skates

Legacy Skates

Legacy Skates

Legacy Skates

“We already had knowledge. We were already comfortable with the local community. I had worked for multiple top brands, so I already had the relationships to easily open up the accounts,” he said, indicating just how in demand products were late last spring and how critical it was to have a robust inventory and access to replenishing it. 

“We were getting high volume orders daily. We had to hire multiple people,” Powell said. “It was insane and amazing all at the same time.” 

Navigating ways to maintain the store’s inventory, hire smart, market and fund the business proved to be a juggling act for the Powells as they worked tirelessly to keep their balance. 

“It was very invigorating, it feels like this big sense of accomplishment — but there’s so much more to be done because it literally has not slowed down at all since last March [2020].”

Legacy Skates

Legacy Skates

On days when business is slower, Powell spends time teaching his 4-year-old daughter how to skate, he said. 

“She loves to skate. We taught her how to do it in our house because rinks were closed during the pandemic, but now she loves to do it. She can’t wait to go to the roller rinks whenever we let her.”

Such joys remind Powell of his younger self and his relationship with his dad, who recently passed away shortly after he visited the new home of Legacy Skates in the Westside South neighborhood. 

“When he visited, I was telling him, ‘Man, look, we made it. … Look what skating has done [for me] today. Look what you did. This is all because of you,’” he said. “I’m really glad we got to have that conversation.”

With the business up and running, Powell’s goals have shifted as he taps into the energies and  life lessons of the legacy left behind by his father. 

“Everybody who works here, they don’t work for us — they work with us. We always want to empower them to not only have a good time, but to find happiness,” Powell said, drawing parallels to his own pursuit of happiness. 

“Every person that comes in and leaves here — I don’t care if they remember our company at all. I just want them to put those roller skates on — even for two or three times [before they] throw them in the garage — I want them to find the happiness that myself, my wife, and a lot of my friends have found through roller skating.”

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

        Applicants pour in for a chance at $500K in LaunchKC grants

        By Tommy Felts | April 13, 2018

        Editor’s note: This article is sponsored by LaunchKC but was independently produced by Startland News. After dishing out $1.5 million to 29 startups over the last three years, LaunchKC returns in 2018 with more experience and an enduring determination to drive entrepreneurial impact in Kansas City. The area’s most-popular grants contest already has garnered hundreds…

        Christine Clutton, The Wild Way Coffee Creations

        Peek inside: Wild Way coffee rolling Austin flavor onto Kansas City’s bean scene

        By Tommy Felts | April 12, 2018

        Christine Clutton is taking the rollout of her Wild Way coffee camper concept one cup at a time, she said. Debuting Friday in Midtown, the mobile shop — serving coffee, tea and pastries with a mix of Austin and local flavors — is envisioned as a temporary stop on Clutton’s entrepreneurial journey, she said. “Our…

        Nonprofit Village

        Nonprofit Village in Midtown aims to cut costs, attack basic needs for mission-based groups

        By Tommy Felts | April 12, 2018

        An area investment firm has opened a new collaborative working space to help support Kansas City’s vast network of nonprofits. Led by Jon McGraw and Mehgan Flynn, 31w31 investment group launched the Nonprofit Village, a 6,300-square-foot space at the recently-renovated historic building at 31 W. 31st St. The village hopes to soothe the pervasive challenge…

        Jim David, Blue Collar Press, Sean Ingram and Burton Parker, MerchTable

        Merchtable powers a chorus of online stores for emerging bands, artists

        By Tommy Felts | April 11, 2018

        Lawrence-based Merchtable plays the tune of an accidental tech company, said co-founder Burton Parker, but it’s proven to be a song of success. Operating 200 online merch stores for such varied artists as singer-songwriter Rufus Wainwright, comedian Maria Bamford, avant-garde metal band Neurosis, and a host of podcast, DJ, dance and EDM clients, the business…