Driver crashes renovation progress at Walt Disney’s former KC studio; effort to save historic building draws on
August 4, 2021 | Kevin Collison
Editor’s note: The following story originally published by CityScene KC, an online news source focused on Greater Downtown Kansas City. Click here to read the original story or here to sign up for the weekly CityScene KC email review.
The driver of a black Dodge Charger crashed the renovation party underway at the historic Laugh-O-gram building near 31st and Troost over the weekend, leaving a hole in the structure and the project budget.
“The last thing we expected was someone running into the building, we’d been making good progress,” said Gary Sage, who leads the building development committee at Thank You, Walt Disney, the nonprofit behind the endeavor. The driver fled the scene of the accident that occurred about 4 a.m. Saturday, leaving behind the partly-embedded car. Sage said police found a woman’s driver’s license and an open margarita in the car. The front end was buried in bricks.
“She’s lucky, because an I-beam fell out,” Sage said. “She punched a hole in the side of the building that will be the main entrance and part of the second floor above it.”
Click here to read Startland News’s previous coverage on the ongoing Thank You, Walt Disney project.
It’s too early to tell how much the repairs will cost, but Butch Rigby, said the damage didn’t appear to be structural. Rigby launched the effort to save the building where Walt Disney started his cartooning career in the early 1920s before heading to Hollywood.
“The bottom line, it’s a bump in the road, but it could have been worse,” Rigby said. “Nobody was apparently hurt in the car and it didn’t hit a structural post which would have been a problem.”
The car also hit scaffolding erected by Dello Eco, the firm hired to to repair the bricks and mortar of the facade of the building at 1127 E. 31st St., formally called the McConahay Building.
The facade work is being paid for by $150,000 left from a pledge by Diane Disney, Walt Disney’s late daughter, along with $160,000 in public tax-increment financing funding available.
It was designed by Nelle Peters, a pioneering woman architect, and opened in 1922. It was in advanced deterioration and slated for the wrecking ball when Rigby purchased it in 1996 and launched the Laugh-O-gram effort.
Last winter, backers of the project announced they’d come up with a financially viable strategy for redeveloping the property.
It calls for to be renovated for multiple uses: a small theater and exhibition space dedicated to Disney and his fellow animators; a Plexpod co-working space and a digital media training center run by KC IMAGINE.
The redevelopment of the historic building is part of a wave of investment occurring in the adjoining commercial district along Troost.
Organizers had hoped to begin a capital campaign for the remainder of the restoration project this month, but will probably have to delay fund raising until a better estimate is available of the total cost.
Rigby said that since news broke over the weekend of the accident, about $6,000 has been donated on the Thank You, Walt Disney website.
Sage praised peoples’ generosity, but added more likely will be needed to fill the budget hole caused by the accident.
“We can sure use it at this point, we’re trying to get some sense of what it will cost,” he said.
“We hope this drives sympathy and awareness of what we’re trying to do with the building.”

2021 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Pipeline, NXTUS drive exposure for entrepreneur’s on-demand fuel delivery startup
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. WICHITA…
Tesseract taps into KC’s sticky innovation culture with homegrown partnership to build IoT tools
A new partnership between a leading robotics creator and one of its fellow Kansas City tech innovators showcases the founder’s longstanding commitment to harnessing the region’s potential as a collaboration powerhouse. “When I moved back to Kansas City to start Tesseract, I made up my mind to lead by example and attempt to build close…
A weakness today can be KC’s superpower tomorrow: Call for corporate engagement begins with CEOs
Editor’s note: The following story was sponsored by KC Rising, a regional initiative to help Kansas City grow faster and more intentionally, as part of a campaign to promote its CEO-to-CEO Challenge on supplier diversity. Successful entrepreneurial ecosystems require a certain level of corporate engagement — and even stewardship — said Neal Sharma, noting the…
‘Supplier diversity is deceptively difficult’: How to boost diverse small businesses without tokenizing them
Editor’s note: The following story was sponsored by KC Rising, a regional initiative to help Kansas City grow faster and more intentionally, as part of a campaign to promote its CEO-to-CEO Challenge on supplier diversity. Successful efforts to promote increased, consistent spending with more diverse small businesses must start with C-Suite buy-in, Christine Kelly said,…



