J. Rieger plans to relight ‘Electric Park’ in the East Bottoms, sling boozy snow-cones, cocktail floats

July 27, 2021  |  Startland News Staff

J. Rieger & Co. Electric Park rendering, GastingerWalker&

A new 11,000-square-foot outdoor space is set to open this fall at J. Rieger & Co., the historic East Bottoms-based distillery, with an homage to one of Kansas City’s brightest but nearly forgotten eras.

Boozy snow-cones J. Rieger Electric Park

Boozy snow-cones, J. Rieger & Co.’s Electric Park

The Electric Park Garden Bar — featuring a completely open-air patio bar and an adjoining atrium that will serve as an indoor and outdoor extension of the distillery’s tasting room — takes its name from a long-shuttered amusement park that once lit up the neighborhood.

Also on the playful menu: frozen cocktails, boozy snow-cones, draft cocktails, and cocktail floats.

“We really wanted to create a fun, energetic, and large outdoor gathering space that has the same level of excellence in food, beverage, and design that our guests have enjoyed in our indoor spaces since 2019,” said Andy Rieger, co-founder and president at J. Rieger & Co.

[pullquote]

J. Rieger & Co. was originally founded in 1887 in Kansas City’s West Bottoms Livestock Exchange district. The distillery produced over 100 alcoholic products on a national basis, including the iconic Monogram Whiskey, but it was forced to close in 1919 with the advent of Prohibition.

In 2014, 95 years after Prohibition, the brand was relaunched by business partners Ryan Maybee, co-founder of The Rieger and Manifesto, and Andy Rieger, the great-great-great-grandson of Jacob Rieger. The East Bottoms distillery opened in 2019.

[/pullquote]

The histories of the distillery and Electric Park, which stood in the East Bottoms from 1899 to 1906 overlap, Rieger noted. Electric Park was owned and operated by the Heim brothers, who also launched the Heim Brewery in Kansas City, and bottled their beer in what is today the J. Rieger & Co. distillery building. A beer garden in the amusement park is said to have piped beer directly from the Heim Brewery.

A later incarnation of Electric Park also is rumored to have inspired a young Walt Disney, who arrived in Kansas City in 1911 as a child and later built one of the world’s most recognizable and visited amusement attractions.

“It was surrounded by a train, it had a beautiful fountain, this bandshell where John Phillip Sousa and his band played for the entire summer — so you know this place was a big deal,” said Dan Viets, a Kansas City attorney and Disney historian, describing Electric Park late last year during a Thank You Walt Disney event. “Electric Park was a spectacular place and a big influence on Walt’s idea of what an amusement park could be.”

The park also left an imprint on St. Joseph-born, legendary newscaster Walter Cronkite, who witnessed the latter-day park’s demise by fire in 1925.

“Electric Park Garden Bar was always a part of our original plan for the distillery campus,” said Rieger, referencing the years-long process from the property’s 2017 acquisition to the distillery destination’s opening in July 2019 and the ongoing rollout of attractions and spaces within the East Bottoms site.

The open-air patio bar will have its own free-standing bar with a cocktail menu that is unique to the patio space using recognizable flavors, various classic cocktail styles, and nostalgic theme park and soda parlor references, according to the distillery.

Guests also can expect the space to have its own food trailer that compliments the fun and casual vibe of the Electric Park Garden Bar with a range of unique but approachable offerings from J. Rieger & Co. Executive Chef Jordan Hayes.

J. Rieger & Co. Electric Park rendering, GastingerWalker&

J. Rieger & Co. Electric Park rendering, GastingerWalker&

The space  — outfitted with turf, professional landscaping, and mature trees to create a park-like atmosphere, with reclaimed brick pavers that were once the road that ran through the property — is expected to be open seasonally April through November and will be on-leash dog-friendly.

Announcing plans for the Electric Park Garden Bar comes after months of pandemic pivots and pauses.

“The construction on the patio was delayed by about a year because of COVID,” said Lucy Rieger, brand director at J. Rieger & Co. “We were originally planning to start construction in the spring of 2020, but delays in permitting because those offices were closed and backed up in addition to supply chain issues caused us to push a year.”

Ultimately, work on the Electric Park Garden Bar began in April 2021 with a target opening set for September, she said, noting the project won’t debut to the public until all portions of the bar are complete.

“There is a major appetite for outdoor space because of the pandemic, so we are fortunate we are building the right thing at the right time,” she added.

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

        Frustrated by the fit, this traveler-turned-swimwear founder crafted 10 pairs himself; now his trunk show is going global

        By Tommy Felts | December 3, 2025

        Opening a popup swimwear store in one of Atlanta’s most upscale malls represented a surge of momentum for Tristan Davis’ high-end brand that began not on a beach or a runway, but in Kansas City’s tight-knit startup community. “We’ve gone from an idea in a handmade bathing suit to a high fashion mall in less…

        Harvesting opportunity: How a KC chicken chain turned a strip of parking lot into its latest ingredient

        By Tommy Felts | December 2, 2025

        Months before snow blanketed Kansas City this week, Todd Johnson transformed a weed-filled, unusable portion of parking lot at his Lenexa restaurant into a flourishing garden that serves up fresh produce used in kitchens at all three of his Strips Chicken and Brewing locations in Johnson County. In its first season, Moonglow Gardens — as…

        AI evolved faster than rules to protect people; this founder wants to code ethics back into the tech

        By Tommy Felts | December 2, 2025

        Amber Stewart sees what many overlook in artificial intelligence, she said: the human cost of unregulated technology that can manifest as anything from sexist and racist outcomes to outright theft from willing and unwilling members of the public. “I’m not afraid of the tech,” said Stewart, founder and CEO of GuardianSync. “I’m afraid of unfettered…

        A romantic hideaway (for you and a book): Entrepreneur’s heart for reading opens store on Independence Square

        By Tommy Felts | December 2, 2025

        America Fontenot didn’t plan to launch her new Independence bookstore on national Small Business Saturday — the busiest shopping weekend of the year — but renovation delays just kept pushing back the opening, she said. So while many small shops were offering Black Friday-adjacent deals to get customers in the front door, Fontenot’s The Littlest…