Made in KC opens beachy JoCo café Outta The Blue — complete with indoor palm trees and tropical drinks

June 10, 2021  |  Tommy Felts

Outta The Blue, Park Place

In an era of online ordering, curbside delivery and quick departures, Made in KC’s latest concept — a breezy beach café in Leawood — envisions an oasis where Kansas Citians swing by, but stay, for local coffee, natural wines, hard-to-find tropical cocktails, and vegan sandwiches from Mattie’s.

Keith Bradley, co-owner of Made in KC, and AJ Valle, manager of Outta The Blue

Keith Bradley, co-owner of Made in KC, and AJ Valle, manager of Outta The Blue

“We’re not quite a full-on restaurant experience with this concept, but we do want you to hang out,” Keith Bradley, co-owner of Made in KC, said of the new Outta The Blue Café. “Given the beauty and size of the space with these great windows, as well as the Park Place shopping center outside, it really lends itself to staying for a while versus pulling your car in, grabbing something and immediately leaving.

“We really want to play into people’s desire for community and to socialize.”

Outta The Blue set sail Wednesday with its official grand opening getaway planned for June 19.

Click here to explore Outta The Blue Café’s menu.

“Our biggest undertaking were the swings and the king palms that we have in the space to really make it feel different, but not too overwhelming or kitschy — and a place you’d want to come to every day,” said Bradley.

Made in KC, a retail curator of Kansas City-made goods, now operates 11 retail stores and cafes — some with Made in KC branding, like the neighborhood shops and marketplaces; others with more unique, niche feels, like Outta The Blue and the mountain-themed Front Range Coffeehouse & Provisions in Fairway.

“We’re calling it a sister store: Outta The Blue by Made in KC,” Bradley detailed. “The biggest element of local is within our coffee program [coordinated by Marcell Coffee], which you also see reflected in all our Made in KC cafes. Our pastry, our grab-and-go options — all of that is heavily local as well. These are areas where we can really rely on the Kansas City creative community, as well as the infrastructure we’ve already built with other cafes, to give us a leg up.”

Click here to read more about Mattie’s Foods and the sisters behind the vegan food trendsetter.

Along with light table-side service, Outta The Blue is expected to cater to later-in-the-day customers with its emphasis on tropical drinks and wines, he said.

Outta The Blue, Park Place

Outta The Blue, Park Place

“This is one of the first concepts we’ve built with the evening crowd in mind,” Bradley said. “And with the successful restaurants in this area and the programming from Park Place, this is one of the first shopping centers in the metro to bring back live social events in a safe way. So we’re hoping to see just as much traffic, if not more, in the evenings than just the everyday morning coffee crowd.”

“It’s worth noting that one of the best parts is our wine list, which is super approachable but totally different from what can be found in south KC,” added Tyler Enders, co-owner of Made in KC. “Adam Pfeifer is running our wine program, which features lots of natural wines, skin contact wines, biodynamic wines, canned wines, kegged wines, and more.

“It should be a great introduction to different wines from aficionados to novices.”

Nearly a year in the making, bringing Outta The Blue to Park Place comes as the result of a mix of Made in KC’s success across the metro, changing trends related to the pandemic, and shifts in brick-and-mortar and shopping center usage, Bradley said.

Outta The Blue, Park Place

Outta The Blue, Park Place

Suddenly a lot of doors — and interesting spaces — are open to the retailer.

“Some of them really pique our interest,” he said, turning his attention to the cafe around him. “This place is awesome with these cool, tall windows on a corner; Those elements really get the wheels turning when someone throws out an idea. That’s when you start thinking … ‘Well, what if we brought in palm trees?’”

And months later, a handful of full-sized indoor palm trees from San Diego provide an eye-catching first impression of the space.

“We thought once they got here, we could easily move them into the space,” Bradley recalled with a smile. “It was five guys in the back of a truck, trying to get as close to the door as possible, shimmying in, then getting a forklift and straps to lower them — it was an intense process, but they’re the perfect size for the space.”

“The palm trees and the swings were the two elements of the space we’re most proud of, but not surprisingly, the hardest to execute,” he added, crediting a small in-house team of builders who helped make the floor-to-ceiling swings a reality.

Outta The Blue, Park Place

Outta The Blue, Park Place

Despite the setting, Bradley, Enders and co-owner Thomas McIntyre aren’t content to put up their own feet and relax in the little oasis, Bradley said.

“This place looks really good right now, but it’s going to look even better in a year,” he said. “It’s what happened at Front Range and at Plaza marketplace. We’re constantly tweaking and making improvements. Sometimes we’re trying to get open with the idea that ‘done is better than perfect’ and we make sure it becomes perfect along the way. We never just set it and forget it.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

2021 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Erin Luttrell, Eclairs de la Lune

    Legacy-filled eclair shop launches with crowds, pastry case lined with custom, unexpected treats

    By Tommy Felts | August 6, 2021

    Chef Erin Luttrell recalls tales of lines out the door and around the block at her great-grandparents’ bakery in the 1920s — the inspiration behind her newly opened sweets shop on the historic Independence Square. “During the grain strike, people couldn’t get flour or bread or products to bake at home for their families, so they…

    Cori Smith, BLK + BRWN

    BLK + BRWN debuts KC’s first smart bookstore with a twist: ‘I wanted to be as Black as possible’

    By Tommy Felts | August 5, 2021

    Kansas City’s newest Black woman-owned, brick-and-mortar bookstore in Midtown has opened its doors, but customers shouldn’t judge the operation by its cover, owner Cori Smith said, revealing an additional first for the metro that has heads and pages turning.   “There’s a technological aspect paired with each book,” explained Smith, owner of BLK + BRWN — Kansas…

    eHawk team 2021

    Why KCRise Fund chose a Lee’s Summit-built criminal justice smartphone app for its first lead investment

    By Tommy Felts | August 5, 2021

    A Kansas City startup’s smartphone-enabled alternative to ankle monitors taps into a huge courts and corrections market — with the potential for tremendous cost savings and societal impact, said Darcy Howe. And that docket of benefits presents a unique opportunity for KCRise Fund, which this week announced its lead investment in Lee’s Summit-based eHawk, added…

    UpDown Nightlife team

    UpDown Nightlife caps $500K seed round with party bus partnership; app to launch this month

    By Tommy Felts | August 4, 2021

    Building an app centered on nightlife and in-person entertainment during a pandemic requires intense focus and intentionality every step of the way, Joshua Lewis said.  “It’s been a slow and steady walk to the app launch,” said the founder of UpDown Nightlife — an app that connects consumers to local bars, clubs and entertainment. “With…