Katz cat grins again: KC icon returning to the streets — this time near Liberty Memorial
September 1, 2022 | Kevin Collison
Editor’s note: The following story was 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 Katz Drug Store sign, a one-time iconic streetscape fixture in Kansas City and beyond with its happy cat sporting a bow tie, has a new life thanks to LUMI, a museum dedicated to neon signs.
A 10-foot tall replica of the Katz sign has been fashioned by Fossil Forge, a Lee’s Summit firm specializing in restoring and fabricating signs, and ultimately will be part of a neon museum slated for the planned Pennway Point downtown entertainment district.
The entertainment district is being pursued by developer Vince Bryant at the foot of the West Pennway and Pershing viaduct across from the IRS processing facility near Union Station. It also will included a Ferris wheel, microbrewery and other recreational activities.
Click here to learn more about Pennway Point and its skyline-changing plans for Kansas City.
“I remember how the Katz sign was so exciting to see in my childhood,” said Nick Vedros, founder of LUMI. “It was sort of like the Holy Grail, if I ever found one it would be fantastic.”

Nick Vedros celebrates at the lighting of the Katz drugstore sign at Fossil Forge August 26 in Lee’s Summit, photo courtesy of LUMI
Vedros never recovered an original sign, they apparently wound up in scrapyards after the Katz chain was bought in 1971, but he learned enough restoring other neon signs to calculate the approximate cost of fabricating a new one.
With the financial help of friends and LUMI benefactors Fred and Jami Pryor, Vedros commissioned Fossil Forge to fabricate a new sign.
The firm is owned by Ben Wine and Dave Eames.
Click here to read more about the team that brought the Katz cat sign back to life.
“I went through old photos of different signs over the years, there were three or four versions, and took a mashup of all their features to make a homage to all of them,” Wine said.
“It was probably the most challenging sign we’ve made, not only the design but the engineering,” Eames said.
The sign built by Fossil is 10-feet tall and eight-feet wide, and will rotate 360 degrees atop a 10-foot pole.
It’s fabricated with aluminum and weighs about 300 pounds, considerably lighter than the original Katz signs made of steel.
Element Ten, a neon fabricator, designed and installed the 116 feet of neon tubing that illuminates the smiling Katz.
A sneak preview of the new sign, appropriately called “Let the Kat Out of the Bag,” was held last week at the Fossil studio in Lee’s Summit.
“I couldn’t believe the response of people about seeing that sign,” Vedros said.
Wine and Eames were pleased with the response as well.
“Nostalgia is a powerful thing, to watch people react to that sign and see their emotions is a great payoff,” Eames said.
“This is the type of project that we wake up on the morning and try to get,” Wine added.
“This is an iconic sign that was created for all of their businesses but got scrapped before people cared about these things.”
At its peak, Katz Drug Store operated 65 stores in five states. The business was founded in 1914 by brothers Ike and Mike Katz. Their first two stores opened in downtown Kansas City.
Probably their most well-known location was an art deco building with a prominent clock tower at Main Street and Westport Road. That former Katz is being renovated currently as part of an apartment development.
Vedros said his LUMI neon museum plan, which he started pursuing in 2017, is doing well and he’s excited to be part of the Pennway Point plan.
“We’ve gotten a lot of donations, and rescued 72 signs and restored 30 of them with four more in production,” he said.
The Pennway Point plan calls for an 80-foot “neon alley” where the LUMI sign collection will be displayed on the sides of two buildings. Signs also will be installed throughout the development and Vedros hopes the tall Katz sign will be at its center.
“I think it’s fantastic they recreated this sign from photos and other images,” Bryant said. “It’s an amazing part of Kansas City history.”
Featured Business

2022 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Union Station tapped for GEWKC base camp; training for treps arrives Nov. 19-21 in KC
When GEWKC pulls into Kansas City this fall, the metro’s largest educational entrepreneurship event will be stationed within one of the community’s crown jewels — a link to the past that points to a brighter future for the regions’ innovators, said Chante Keller. KCSourceLink on Thursday formally announced Union Station as the 2024 base camp…
NXTSTAGE announces trio of KC ventures tapped for latest Enterprise Engagement cohort
A record number of Kansas entrepreneurs joining the NXTSTAGE Enterprise Engagement Series means the program’s latest cohort will scale up its impact, said Amber Dunn. “It’s exciting to witness the relationships formed and the knowledge gained among cohort members and our enterprise partners, both new and returning,” said Dunn, program manager at Wichita-based NXTUS, which…
This startup leader is revealing entrepreneur answers (and they’re listed in the table of contents)
Aligning the stars as a forward-looking founder and business owner isn’t easy, Maria Flynn noted, so she wrote her own guidebook. “Entrepreneurs are my tribe of people,” said Flynn, a serial founder and regional digital health leader. “And I was telling the same stories over and over again, so I started to write them down.…
He earned industry cred alongside Ariana Grande; now Jo Blaq wants to share the music with emerging KC artists
Joseph Macklin forged a successful music career through trial and error, he said, but that doesn’t mean the next generation should be forced to endure those same challenges just to feel like they earned credibility. The multi-platinum, Grammy award-nominated music producer, songwriter, engineer, and vocal arranger — known as Jo Blaq — is on a…





