Watch: Meet the band of local contractors behind the development of Troost Village 

August 12, 2021  |  Channa Steinmetz

Fahteema Parrish, Parrish & Sons Construction

Editor’s note: The following story includes the second video in a four-part series taking a look under the hard hats at the Troost Village development, a $162 million project on Troost Avenue, the city’s longtime racial dividing line. Videos in this series are expected to debut on Startland News as the project unfolds. Click here to watch “Part one: Visualizing the Village.”

With Troost Avenue’s intimate role in Kansas City’s past, the local community deserves to take the lead on shaping the corridor’s future, Jonathan O’Neil Cole noted.

Troost Village Development

Troost Village Development

What is Troost Village?

The $162 million project includes the renovation of four historic buildings (the Belmont, Firestone, Michaelson and Shankman), along with two buildings that are not on the historic register (the Tycor and Harkness).

Boundaries for Troost Village run north-south from 31st Street to Linwood Boulevard and east-west from Forest Street to Harrison Street — crossing Troost. The development area touches such Troost destinations as Thelma’s Kitchen and the in-the-works Laugh-O-gram Studios rehab project, and sits just south of Operation Breakthrough at 31st and Troost.

“I think the great story about this entire development is that it is people from our community who are invested and working on it. They have personal connections to the site, and that’s what makes this project so special,” said Cole, the founding principal of Pendulum Studio — the architecture firm selected for the Troost Village development

Click here to read more about the project, which runs north-south from 31st Street to Linwood Boulevard and east-west from Forest Street to Harrison Street. 

Jonanthan O’Neil Cole, Pendulum Studio, and Tim Bowman, Compass Resources, Troost Village Development

Jonanthan O’Neil Cole, Pendulum Studio, and Tim Bowman, Compass Resources, Troost Village Development

Rather than outsourcing corporate contractors, Cole and Tim Bowman — who serves as the partnership leader on the four-year project with Midtown Development Partners — have strived to engage locals by providing job opportunities to get involved, Cole shared. 

“It’s meaningful that many of [our contractors] have history on the site — some visiting the site as a child, or perhaps hearing stories from their parents or grandparents about what things were like when this two block stretch of Troost was the destination years ago,” Cole said. “The fact that we are collaborating with the community to bring that energy and vibrancy back is incredibly important to me.”

The second of four videos — “The Village Behind Troost Village” — debuts below today.

The latest installment in the series introduces three of the local contractors who are on-site moving the ground and overseeing the project’s mechanical and engineering aspects. The video series is produced by the Kansas City-based, women-owned company, Stellar Image Studios (SIS)

Fahteema Parrish, the owner and president of Parrish & Sons Construction, is working on the renovation of the Michaelson building — one of four historic buildings (along with the Belmont, Firestone and Shankman) incorporated into the project. She recalled walking through that very building with her father as a young girl.

Fahteema Parrish, Parrish & Sons Construction

Fahteema Parrish, Parrish & Sons Construction

“My dad used to take me into [the Michaelson], and I’d help him find reconditioned or refurbished appliances for his clients,” Parrish shared, noting that her father owned his own HVAC company. 

“Now my husband and I are able to take our four sons to the project and tell them about how their grandpa was able to serve our community from this same site,” she continued. “Just being a part of that evolution, it really feels amazing to say the least.”

Parrish & Sons Construction was named a finalist for the Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce’s 2021 Small Business of the Year award.

Parrish also feels a sense of connection with the other small business owners on-site, she said — explaining that she previously met Elisabeth DeCoursey, the president of KC Testing and Engineering, in AltCap’s NeXt Stage KC program.

“It would have been easy for them to have called in an outside team of non-local contractors; so bringing in that local talent speaks volumes about the leadership,” Parrish said. “It is important to keep that money within the community to further develop the local economy. It also has other impacts, like providing jobs which can decrease crime and vandalism.” 

About 65 percent of the contractors working on the Troost Village development are minority business enterprises (MBE) and/or women business enterprises (WBE), Bowman, the project leader, previously told Startland News.

Watch “Part two: The Village Behind Troost Village” then keep scrolling.

Part two: The Village Behind Troost Village from Stellar Image Studios on Vimeo.

Bill Alexander, owner of Alexander Mechanical, has known Bowman for nearly 40 years, he said. Upon first hearing about the Troost Village development, Alexander was shocked someone was willing to so heavily invest in the area, but it all clicked when he realized Bowman was at the forefront of the project, he shared. 

Tim Bowman, Troost Village, and Bill Alexander, Alexander Mechanical

Tim Bowman, Troost Village, and Bill Alexander, Alexander Mechanical; image courtesy of Stellar Image Studios

“We had seen a lot of renovation on the North end of Troost … but we weren’t seeing much happen South of 27th Street,” Alexander noted. “The idea that somebody would come in and develop a large amount of property in that area is definitely worth recognizing. There is so much time, money and effort that’s being put into this development.”

When it comes to developing and revitalization, a crucial conversation must be centered around gentrification, Parrish added. 

“Although it is very exciting to be enhancing an area, there are still goals in place to make sure that [housing and needs] are still affordable for the individuals who live there,” Parrish said. “So the intentionality to keep things affordable, that’s the truly exciting part about this.” 

Part three of the Troost Village video series is expected to feature Ruben Alonso, president of AltCap, which is set to open a new office in the Michaelson building upon completion. 

 

Troost Village Development

Troost Village Development

Troost Village Development

Troost Village Development

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

    Annie Powell and Luke Powell, Legacy Skates

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

    By Tommy Felts | May 26, 2021

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

    Startland News office at Spark Kansas City

    Startland News opens office in Spark Kansas City; move boosts exposure, highlights momentum

    By Tommy Felts | May 26, 2021

    A new strategic partnership between Startland News and Spark Kansas City is expected to strengthen the nonprofit newsroom’s brand and storytelling capacity with broader reach and new opportunities for live and virtual programming, said Tommy Felts. “Collaboration sparks greater impact,” said Felts, news director for Startland News. “A key element of our work is exposing…

    A.J. Mellott and Heather Decker, Ronawk

    Olathe startup set to launch STEM training facility; plans to create 150 jobs over next seven years

    By Tommy Felts | May 25, 2021

    Starting as two scientists with an idea to solve slow and costly cell production, Ronawk has now blossomed into a rapidly growing startup with an increasing demand for its work, said A.J. Mellott. “We quickly realized that Ronawk was going to need a lot of talent to meet the demand of its products,” said Mellott,…

    Sulaiman Z. Salaam III, Suli4Q

    R3AL potential: Why Suli4Q’s work in KC doesn’t stop with the final track on his Top 10 hip hop album

    By Tommy Felts | May 25, 2021

    A wildly successful 2020 for indie performer Suli4Q wouldn’t mean as much if the entertainer, entrepreneur, and evangelist for Kansas City prosperity didn’t also focus on impact in the real world, he said. “In my journey, my biggest goal in reaching my full potential is being able to visibly see the changes that I’m having…