Bridge Space opens doors to creativity, collaboration in Lee’s Summit (Photos)
September 27, 2018 | Austin Barnes
Set against the historic backdrop of the former Lee’s Summit post office, the past and present intentionally collide to create Bridge Space — a 13,000-square-foot coworking space that elevates entrepreneurs in the city’s bustling downtown business district, said Ben Rao.
“I’m in the hospitality business. It’s about this experience that people have. We’re not just filling spaces,” said Rao, founder of Bridge Space, of the intentionality ingrained in every corner of the coworking space.
It’s a place designed to propel startups toward success and inspire thoughtful and creative ideas among their teams, he said.
Conference rooms and open-air event spaces, a patio area, community kitchen, and historic vault turned podcasting studio pull the entrepreneurial environment together to create an experience that is uniquely Bridge Space, Rao explained.
Open spaces and communal sinks are just two of the ways Bridge Space opens a door to intentional networking opportunities for startups and small businesses, who hold private offices within the coworking space, he said.
Murals painted by local artists cover dozens of walls throughout the building — acknowledgement of the creative and collaborative climate that inhabits Bridge Space, Rao explained.
“As soon as people come in, they say, ‘I didn’t realize I wanted this,’” he said, an example of the community’s increasing interest in the culture of coworking.
Keep reading below the photo gallery.
Bridge Space memberships — complete with a mailbox and around-the-clock building access — begin at $250 a month.
Open for a little more than a month, Bridge Space continues to look for startups to inhabit its plethora of window-walled, offices. The space is slowly but surely filling up, largely with tech startups, Rao said from atop the building’s interior balcony — created from the remains of secret tunnels, once roamed by federal agents working for the U.S. Postal Service.
Creating opportunities for his neighbors to grow their businesses in the city he calls home has been a bonus for the self-proclaimed serial entrepreneur, Rao said with excitement.
“I don’t know all the answers for Lee’s Summit. I just think it’s a focus group of people and some timing and then it’s like, now we have spaces like this. I see a philosophy of living in the city, realizing, ‘OK, we can create jobs through entrepreneurship.’”
Rao wholeheartedly believes coworking will transform the entrepreneurial ecosystem that’s developed in the northwest Missouri suburb over the last several years, he said.
Featured Business
2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
UMKC, Digital Sandbox KC partnership to maximize resources, create jobs
The University of Missouri-Kansas City’s E-Scholars program has partnered with a business incubator program to provide resources and capital to student entrepreneurs. The program has partnered with Digital Sandbox KC to offer inroads to students to further develop their business projects with additional funding. “The UMKC Entrepreneurship Scholars program has a very specific goal –…
KC smart city ‘an invitation’ to innovators, entrepreneurs
The City of Kansas City, Mo., has signed an agreement with Sprint and Cisco to create the largest smart city in North America in the City of Fountains. Sprint will be building a network of connectivity worth up to $7 million dollars while Cisco will be providing smart city infrastructure worth upwards of $5 million. The…
Startup Little Hoots working with Today Show, Huffington Post
Kansas City-based Little Hoots has scored two high-profile partnerships that are scoring its memory-saving app thousands of additional downloads. The tech firm is working with the Today Show and the Huffington Post to provide snippets from its memory-keeping platform that captures youngsters’ memorable quotations to share with friends and family. “Whenever they publish one of these Little Hoots…














