Best in show: Bar K vies for USA Today’s dog bar prize; here’s how a shared love of dogs is pushing expansion
June 13, 2024 | Ben Wolf
The human-dog bond — and a desire to embrace it at places like Bar K’s innovative bar, restaurant, and dog park experience — is stronger than today’s often partisan and divisive climate, said David Hensley.
“It doesn’t matter your political affiliations … where you’re from, your socioeconomic status,” he said. “Everybody loves dogs, and that shared love of dogs brings people together.”
That mentality and commitment to Bar K’s mission helped put the popular Kansas City business in the running for USA Today’s Top 10 Best Dog Bars in America, added Hensley, who co-founded Bar K with Leib Dodell in 2016.
Click here to vote for Bar K in the USA Today readers choice contest. (Voting ends June 24.)
Keeping growth organic
Since opening its permanent Kansas City location on the Berkley Riverfront in August 2018, Bar K has played host to about 500,000 canine guests and 700,000 people, Hensley said.
Building a community of people around their love of dogs, the experiential business began expanding its footprint amid the COVID-19 pandemic. After researching demand in markets outside Kansas City, Hensley and Dodell introduced St. Louis to a 50,000-square-foot Bar K facility of its own in November 2021.
The grand opening for an Oklahoma City location followed in January 2023; an undertaking Hensley described as being built from the ground up.
News broke in mid-2023 that expansion could jump to an even higher level with Bar K’s planned acquisition by Arizona-based Diversified Partners. The deal — which ultimately fell through — would have involved adding as many as 100 new locations.
“It didn’t get to the finish line,” Hensley acknowledged, noting that in many ways, “That’s OK.”
“We’re gonna continue to grow the brand organically,” he said.
Bar K’s leaders still plan to expand; just maybe not quite that fast, Hensley added.
“It’s our goal to be the experiential brand for dog-human recreation,” he noted

Dogs play together at Bar K’s location on the Kansas City riverfront; photo by Greysen Williams, Startland News
At the forefront, on the riverfront
Near Bar K’s first permanent location, the surrounding Kansas City riverfront is seeing a resurgence — now anchored by not only the dog bar, but CPKC Stadium, new housing, and the KC Streetcar expansion.
“When Bar K moved [from its early temporary location to the current spot], there was really nothing down here. It was kind of a blank slate,” Hensley said. “But the whole vision was to really develop a new community, a new destination area for Kansas Citians on the riverfront.”
FAQ: How KC’s riverfront is going from a dumping ground to an entertainment district

2024 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Tired of waiting at the barber shop? An AI-infused platform grown at UMKC could trim time
Born in the barber’s chair, Kansas City-based ScheduleMe could take more than a little off the top for service-based retailers. The startup plans to use artificial intelligence to groom the haphazard scheduling process entirely, its co-founders said. “We discovered that [our barbershop] was having issues with scheduling. What we wanted to do was try to…
AudreySpirit fashions clothing to help chronically ill child patients feel like themselves again
AudreySpirit is designed to bring dignity to chronically sick children, said Donna Yadrich, detailing a specially created clothing line that doesn’t sacrifice practicality. “When my daughter Audrey was in the [Intensive Care Unit] the last time, I was looking at her arms and she just had so many wires and everything coming out of her…
KCultivator Q&A: Chad Feather ventured to China and back, stayed for KC kindness, community
Editor’s note: KCultivators is a lighthearted profile series to highlight people who are meaningfully enriching Kansas City’s entrepreneurial ecosystem. The KCultivator Series is sponsored by Plexpod, a progressive coworking platform offering next generation workspace for entrepreneurs, startups, and growth-stage companies of all sizes. Age doesn’t define entrepreneurial talent and Chad Feather is proof, he said…
UMKC Enactus team kicks open front door to Kansas City innovation scene with final four win
As the number of teams left standing in the Enactus U.S. nationals started to dwindle, members of the competitive entrepreneurial development program’s team at the University of Missouri-Kansas City rode a pulsating wave of excitement and emotion, recalled Ali Brandolino. “I started crying,” added Brandolino, UMKC Enactus vice president of operations. “It was the most…




