Not excited about these 3 Downtown KC projects? ‘You need to have your pulse checked’
October 20, 2023 | Nikki Overfelt Chifalu
It’s never been a better time for businesses in Downtown Kansas City, shared Mike Klamm.
“A lot of us are Kansas City natives, and if you’re not excited about where we are right now, I do think you need to have your pulse checked,” said Klamm, chair of the Downtown Council board and senior vice president at CBRE at this week’s Downtown Kansas City Office Summit.

Mike Klamm, CBRE, at this week’s Downtown Kansas City Office Summit; photo by Taylor Wilmore, Startland News
Downtown provides an appealing environment for businesses seeking a thriving location that will help them build culture and attract and retain the best talent, he continued.
“It endures as the region’s largest employment center and fastest growing residential neighborhood in the area,” he explained. “Downtown benefits from a substantial volume of housing intermixed with offices, health care, education, a strong convention and tourism business, and a vibrant art scene, as well as award winning restaurants.”
Klamm said downtown also endures as the most concentrated node for economic activity.
“Thirty-five percent of employees work in the downtown environment,” he added. “As a major employment center, downtown’s success is directly linked to our surrounding diverse neighborhoods as one interconnected whole.”
Over the past year, he said, three major developments have gotten his pride and excitement for the future of downtown building.
Potential Royals ballpark district

A rendering by design firm Populous shows what a proposed Royals ballpark would look like in Kansas City’s East Village. The Royals want to build a pedestrian bridge above the highway so fans can walk from Paseo Boulevard into the stadium in Kansas City’s East Village; rendering courtesy of the Kansas City Royals
East Village in downtown is one of two sites — the other in North Kansas City — the Kansas City Royals ball club is still waffling between for its planned $2 billion ballpark entertainment district.

This rendering shows the outside of a proposed Royals baseball stadium if it were located in Kansas City’s East Village; rendering courtesy of the Kansas City Royals, Populous
“Obviously, the potential for having a baseball park and district downtown is huge,” Klamm noted.
The proposed district would cover 27 acres, from 8th Street in the north to 12th Street in the south, and Charlotte Street in the east to Cherry Street in the west.
Site renderings include a pedestrian bridge above the highway to funnel people from Paseo Boulevard to the stadium, a hotel and conference venue and an event plaza.
Team representatives said in August that the East Village site would focus more on attracting local businesses and restaurants to create an entertainment district that operates year-round, including a “Cherry Street experience” made up of retail development and local restaurants, according to KCUR.
RELATED: Royals preview ballpark of the future
South Loop Project
The proposed South Loop Link project is a sustainable urban park that will extend over the 5.5 acre stretch of I-670 from Wyandotte Street to Grand Boulevard and will link the Central Business District to the Crossroads Arts District.
The project — a collaborative effort led by the Downtown Council, Port KC, and the City of KCMO — is expected to feature an open green lawn, public art, outdoor seating with shade structures, and could include playgrounds, dog parks, and arts and amphitheater programming, according to organizers.
“I think the South Loop link is going to be a transitional thing for both the Crossroads and Downtown,” Klamm said.
Organizers have arranged $90 million to date for the $200 million-plus project and are hoping to have it completed by the 2026 World Cup, according to reporting published by Flatland and CityScene KC.
Greenline KC
The proposed Greenline KC will be a 10-mile urban trail that loops around the greater Downtown area, connecting neighborhoods and showcasing art, according to the Downtown Council.
Two upcoming entertainment districts — Rock Island Bridge and Pennway Point — will be along the loop.
“The Greenline will be a thread that truly links all the neighborhoods in and around Downtown,” Klamm noted.
Check out a brief photo gallery below from this week’s Downtown Kansas City Office Summit. The event focused on what Kansas City must do to attract the next generation of employees – discussing the environment and amenities that appeal to them, both inside and outside of the workplace.

2023 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
New FCC chairman Ajit Pai is familiar with KC startup community
A native Kansan that recently visited with the area’s entrepreneurial community will now head the Federal Communications Commission. President Donald Trump selected Ajit Pai, the senior Republican on the FCC to lead the commission, which regulates interstate and international communications by radio, television, wire, satellite and cable. “I am deeply grateful to the President of…
Need for speed: Mozilla awards $101K to local gigabit projects
The Mozilla Gigabit Community Fund announced it will award a total of $101,000 to fund six local projects that use gigabit technology to impact learning. The Gigabit Community Fund is a national partnership between the National Science Foundation, US Ignite and Mozilla. Locally, the fund partners with KC Digital Drive, whose goal is to leverage…
Firebrand Ventures joins $6.85M round in Des Moines startup
Continuing a streak of investments, Kansas City-based Firebrand Ventures joined a sizable investment in an Iowa-based payments processing startup. Firebrand joined six other venture funds in a $6.85 million funding round in Des Moines-based Dwolla, which builds applications that facilitate bank transfers, manages customers and verifies bank accounts. The round was led by Union Square…
Challenging the notion of ‘entitled millennials,’ Rise Fast empowers young people
When the economy took a turn for the worst in 2008, many millennials saw their parents and grandparents laid off by companies they’d been loyal to for years. Eze Redwood said that although it’s easy to gloss over the impact that traumatic events have on a generation’s psyche, young professionals carry the weight of this…













