Porter House KC earns MO infrastructure grant, pushing its retail incubator closer to opening

August 10, 2023  |  Tommy Felts

Dan Smith and Charon Thompson, The Porter House KC, stand on stage during the PHKC fourth cohort pitch contest; photo by Austin Barnes, Startland News

Funding from a pilot physical infrastructure grants program is expected to help The Porter House KC complete phase 2 of the build out for its new 811 Retail Incubator, focused on boosting retail entrepreneurs from the urban core.

The Porter House KC’s 811 Retail Incubator, August 2023; photo by Channa Steinmetz, Startland News

“This grant will allow us to serve over 90 small businesses focused on retail operations within the next five years, adding over 200 new jobs within the same timeframe and an increase in the opportunity for an increase in wage growth,” said Dan Smith, co-founder of The Porter House KC, describing expectations for the in-the-works physical space at 811 E. 31st St.

The Porter House KC serves early stage entrepreneurs and businesses that are attempting to launch or expand, but have been halted or delayed by the need for greater education or more resources.

Its 811 Retail Incubator proved a fit for the Missouri Technology Corporation’s pilot Physical Infrastructure Grant Program, which seeks to ensure entrepreneurs throughout the state have access to the physical infrastructure and resources required to launch and grow their businesses.

More than $1 million was awarded this week through the program. MTC did not publicly release the local grant amount, but The Porter House KC detailed plans for its impact.

The infrastructure for the 811 Retail Incubator includes nine retail-focused “booths” where early-stage main street entrepreneurs can lease space at a low-cost, short-term lease period, to showcase and sell their products, Smith said.

The space will also be equipped with temporary structures, digital displays, and storage areas for entrepreneurs to house, market, and display their retail-based products. Additionally, the 811 Retail Incubator will feature high-speed internet access, a coffee bar, private office space, an upstairs multi-purpose classroom and event space, and essential amenities like bathrooms and changing rooms.

Rendering of the 811 Retail Incubator, created by the AI Hub; image courtesy of The Porter House KC

“With this physical infrastructure being located in the heart of Kansas City’s urban core, this will allow not just entrepreneurs, but the community, accessible access to visit, work-in, and understand the space,” Smith said. “The goal of this environment is to provide entrepreneurs the opportunity to run their businesses in a brick-and-mortar setting, with a low barrier to entry with low-lease rates, access to professional development (the Growth360 Program in partnership with Missouri Small Business Development Center), and a supportive environment to fail and rebound quickly in an industry that is often less forgiving to a small business owner.”

The Porter House KC expects to rotate entrepreneurs through the incubator within as quickly as six months, and up to 18 months for some small business owners, he said.

“The rotation will depend on a few factors, however our objective is to prepare these entrepreneurs for life; owning their own brick and mortars,” Smith said.

Rendering of the 811 Retail Incubator, created by the AI Hub; image courtesy of The Porter House KC

The incubator’s first entrepreneurs are expected to be selected when the space is completed. Its first phase is expected to open in October, followed by the second phase — powered by the Missouri grant funding — in early 2024.

The Porter House KC’s offices in the 18th and Vine Jazz District

The Porter House KC plans to remain a presence at its current location — 1518 E 18th St. in the 18th and Vine Jazz District — until at least July 2024, Smith said. 

Because of the success of the pilot grant program, MTC plans to launch a full Physical Infrastructure Grant Program in spring 2024. To date, the agency has partnered with more than 60 entrepreneurial support organizations in Missouri communities and awarded a total of more than $31 million in entrepreneurial-focused infrastructure grants that have served thousands of small businesses.

Click here to learn more about the other 2023 Physical Infrastructure Grant recipients, which include organizations like BioSTL and efactory.

Physical infrastructure became a renewed priority for MTC following the release of the Catalyzing Innovation Report in 2022.

For The Porter House KC, the nonprofit let its stakeholders point the way, Smith said.

RELATED: Pitch contest winners salute PHKC as fourth cohort wraps; $15K in prizes awarded to small businesses

Roughly 80 percent of our alumni are retail based businesses, and after surveying them, we found that outside of limited access to capital, the lack of opportunity to test if their products would create a sustainable income for them, their families, and potential employees,” he said. “So after many concept drafts, we came up with the 811 Retail Incubator idea.”

Until recently, The Porter House KC’s impact has been complex and challenging to measure, particularly in contrast to widespread entrepreneurial accelerators who measure impact through a business’s ability to “scale up,” Smith continued.

Dan Smith and Miranda Schultz, The Porter House KC, stand on stage during the PHKC fourth cohort pitch contest; photo by Austin Barnes, Startland News

“After reading the research of Suntae Kim and Anna Kim in ‘How Entrepreneurship Can Revitalize Local Communities’ in the Harvard Business Journal, we found the terminology to describe our work and our desired impact,” he explained, detailing the road that led to realizing the incubator concept.

In the article, the authors write, “Ventures that focus on scaling up may achieve financial success, but they will never turn a Detroit into a Silicon Valley by themselves. To make a meaningful impact on local communities, business leaders and policymakers should foster a mindset of scaling deep, supporting not only the ventures that offer strong returns, but also those that lift up poorer places to achieve sustained self-reliance.”

“The term ‘scaling deep’ is one that resonates deeply with the work that we are passionate about doing,” Smith said. “It drives our desire to improve the education, connection, and funding for the local urban entrepreneurship ecosystem that is already scaling deeply and creating economic viability in communities that need it the most.”

RELATED: PHKC awards $25K to Alchemy Sandbox winners; It’s amazing when someone understands your vision, founder says

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

2023 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    TFA, AT&T deal will expand computer science education in KC

    By Tommy Felts | December 5, 2016

    Despite the growing number of computing job openings, only 1 in 4 U.S. schools offer computer science classes, according to the White House. To expand its computer science initiative, Teach for America Kansas City announced Monday that the organization received a donation of $100,000 from AT&T’s philanthropic arm, AT&T Aspire. The partnership’s goal is to…

    Mycroft AI

    Montgomery: How to support KC startups with your IRA and 401(k)

    By Tommy Felts | December 5, 2016

    Mycroft co-founder Joshua Montgomery recently appealed to the 1 Million Cups community to launch Initiative Six to foster more early-stage investment in Kansas City. The opinions in the commentary are the author’s alone. I recently read yet another article lamenting the lack of investment by Silicon Valley in the Midwest. The author stated how great…

    Kansas program aims to create startups with public-private partnerships

    By Tommy Felts | December 2, 2016

    A new Kansas program is tapping universities to incentivize residents to launch more startups through public-private partnerships. The Kansas Department of Commerce recently kicked off “JumpStart Kansas Entrepreneurs” in the hopes that it will spur economic growth in the Sunflower State via early-stage firms. “The program is designed to stimulate and grow the economy from…

    Humanizing text analysis, Stride marches to international growth

    By Tommy Felts | December 2, 2016

    Computers can do a lot these days, but they can’t process feelings. After all, that’s what sets humans apart from machine — right? Not necessarily it seems, as one Kansas-City based artificial intelligence firm is challenging that notion with its text-analyzing tech that not only identifies subjects but also a writer’s sentiment. A graduate of…