Fresh pour at former Ça Va space: Popular chef takes over Westport hotspot with crisp new Champagne concept
September 21, 2024 | Joyce Smith
Westport Champagne bar and bistro Ça Va closed in March for a quick rebrand. Six months later, a new name, owner and concept are bubbling in the space — with plans to reopen by the holidays.
Chef Amante Domingo — perhaps best known for his Midtown restaurant The Russell — is taking over the spot at 4149 Pennsylvania Ave., on the southern edge of the entertainment district.

The new owner’s vision for “Le Champion” once it pops its cork: a full-service coffee shop in the morning through the afternoon, Wednesdays through Sundays. Domingo’s former business partner, Heather White (of Tailleur, Cheval and Enchante The Bakery in Midtown, will make the pastries, quiche and other savory items for dine-in, or grab-and-go.
Then at 5 p.m. laptops will shut down, music will go up and the lounge menu will roll out — charcuterie, Champagne, wine and cocktails. The space will have a Ralph Lauren/heritage sports decor, Domingo said, noting some nights it will be closed for private events such as birthday and holidays parties.
“I love everyone who is part of Ça Va and I didn’t want to see it go,” Domingo said. “I just wanted it to have more offerings, a coffee shop to make it an all-day place. I just want to continue on with the legacy.”
The founders of Ça Va couldn’t be reached for comment this week. However, the Colorado-based landlord confirmed Le Champion’s lease, and painters were working on the space Friday.
Domingo owns The Russell Restaurant & Catering Co. at 3141 Main St., with an open kitchen, custom wood-fired hearth, and an Argentinian fire table for such dishes as steak chimichurri. (Domingo and White opened The Russell in 2017 and later debuted Tailleur in 2021.)
He also has Noka, a Japanese farmhouse-style restaurant at 334 E. 31st St., on Martini Corner in Midtown. Its menu includes sushi, and entrees such as miso cod and dry-aged salmon.
RELATED: Before restaurant’s debut, this KC founder’s expansion was threatened by predatory loans
He grew up on his father’s 150-acre organic farm near St. Joseph, Missouri, and worked at the family’s vegetarian restaurant in the city’s downtown district. The family also sold their produce at the City Market in Kansas City.
Ça Va — led by the team of chef Howard Hanna, Justin Norcross and Jim Coley — opened in the 750-square-foot space in 2014, specializing in Champagne, boutique wines, and a small plate menu of French-inspired fare — pomme frites, deviled eggs with caviar, cheese boards, duck fat kettle corn and more.
Ça Va (pronounced sah-vah) is an informal greeting, the founders said, akin to “Hello” or “What’s up?”
In a late February Instagram post, the Ça Va’s owners said they had some bittersweet news to share: “We are coming up on our tenth anniversary, which is cause for celebration! However, on the flip side, we’ve reached a decision with this milestone and will be temporarily closing Ça Va for an update of our brand.”
They blamed challenges since the pandemic, and said they wanted to “broaden the scope of our reach by still offering bubbly, but extending into a more international menu from both a food and beverage perspective.”
In other Champagne updates, Blanc Champagne Bar is scheduled to open in October at 3835 Main St., in The Netherland apartment building.
Startland News contributor Joyce Smith covered local restaurants and retail for nearly 40 years with The Kansas City Star. Click here to follower on X (formerly Twitter), here for Facebook, here for Instagram, and by following #joyceinkc on Threads.
Featured Business

2024 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Zohr takes startup lessons on the road as on-demand tire service expands to Dallas streets
As Zohr drives toward national expansion, the on-demand tire services startup is already finding success in Dallas, replicating the metro-wide experience it made popular in hometown Kansas City, said Komal Choong. “We’re getting great responses from our early adopters,” the Zohr co-founder and CEO said. “So we’re very optimistic that it’ll continue to grow, just…
C2FO’s $200M challenge: Prove the fintech startup is worthy of KC’s biggest investments
A record-busting $200 million investment announced Wednesday easily tops C2FO’s previous headline-grabbing funding rounds, but now the Kansas City fintech mega startup must live up to the hype, said Sandy Kemper. “Investments are always forward-looking,” said Kemper, founder and CEO of C2FO. “Our job is to make sure that we’re living up to our ability…
BREAKING: C2FO closes $200M investment led by backer of WeWork, Uber, Slack
Startup giant C2FO continues its climb to the top, having secured a new $200 million investment — and doubling the amount of its once-record funding raise in fewer than two years. “We are very fortunate to have a team who, for years, has delivered industry-leading unit economics, extraordinary customer satisfaction, and strong global growth,” Sandy…
As healthcare pivots to value based service, Helix Health uses data analytics to reduce costs
Prevention is cheaper than cure — a sentiment forming the foundation of Helix Health, said Anurag Patel. “The business of healthcare today is that if you’re sick, then you’re a customer of healthcare. If you’re healthy, then you’re not,” Patel said, describing a need for creating a business model that helps people stay healthy. Helix Health…


