Made in KC replicating its Plaza marketplace in Lee’s Summit; opening set for September

August 14, 2020  |  Tommy Felts

A popular retail marketplace concept made in Kansas City is headed east — to the sixth-largest city in Missouri and a customer base eager to support local makers, said Thomas McIntyre.

“We want to keep growing our footprint, but only where it makes sense,” said McIntyre, co-founder of Made in KC, detailing the decision to replicate the Country Club Plaza’s successful Made in KC Marketplace in Lee’s Summit at the Summit Fair shopping center.

The new space — a 5,600-square-foot anchor location that previously housed a Coldwater Creek womens clothing store — is a natural fit for the brand, which fuses a boldly crisp and clean aesthetic with maker products full of color and character. (Goods range from artisan foods and local apparel brands to Kansas City-made wood and leather works.)

Click here to shop Made in KC.

Made in KC co-owners Keith Bradley, Thomas McIntyre and Tyler Enders

Made in KC co-owners Keith Bradley, Thomas McIntyre and Tyler Enders

On Thursday, McIntyre and co-owners Tyler Enders and Keith Bradley visited the new store for a walk-through of ongoing renovations. They expect to have the space ready and open to customers by early to mid-September.

“It’s laid out much more efficiently, so it doesn’t feel that much smaller [than the Plaza location],” McIntyre said. “When you’re inside, you see it has a very high ceiling, lots of big windows.”

Like the well-known Plaza spot that opened in July 2018, the Lee’s Summit marketplace will feature a collection of more than a dozen Kansas City makers who essentially operate stores within a store — though all products are barcoded by Made in KC and sold through a centralized point-of-sale system manned with Made in KC team members.

At least initially, 85 to 90 percent of the makers featured in the Lee’s Summit marketplace — from among more than 200 represented across Made in KC’s stores — will overlap with the Plaza location, McIntyre said.

“There’s not a whole lot of nerves about opening during a pandemic,” he said. “It just feels like a winning combination of location and the people involved.”

Lee’s Summit jumps out

The retail curator of Kansas City-made goods has grown in leaps since the mid-2010s, opening stores across the metro and tweaking its format with new additions to the Made in KC family. It now operates locations on the Plaza, at Briarcliff, Corinth Mall and Prairie Fire, as well as downtown at the original Made in KC Cafe.

A new location at Martini Corner in Midtown is set for a fall opening. Click here to read more about plans for Made in KC’s relocation to the site from its Crossroads headquarters.

“We’ve been a very north-south company so far — as people often are in Kansas City — focusing on that downtown-to-suburbs spread,” said McIntyre. “We’ve definitely intentionally started looking east-west in the past year for different opportunities. And as soon as you do that, Lee’s Summit just kind of jumps out at you.”

Summit Fair, Lee’s Summit

Among the factors drawing Made in KC to Lee’s Summit: a zip code that kept popping up in analyses of Plaza and online customers.

“Demographically, it’s a really good fit for our target market,” McIntyre said.

And Summit Fair adds its own benefits, he said, acknowledging he among the co-owners was originally the most reluctant to embrace a shopping center over a more standalone structure for the Lee’s Summit retail site.

“When you start drilling in, the center gets really good traffic right now, it has a great feel, and we have an ability to serve existing customers,” McIntyre said. “We also feel confident in our ability to drive traffic ourselves, so even if a customer is not already a Summit Fair shopper, we think we can draw them to the marketplace and help out other tenants in the surrounding area as well.”

Made in KC's Lee's Summit Marketplace

Made in KC’s Lee’s Summit Marketplace

Thirsty for an experience

In addition, the center lacks an existing coffee shop — a feature that has long been a passion for McIntyre, who was the force behind the hybrid retail-coffee concept that debuted at Made in KC’s downtown cafe in late 2018.

The new Lee’s Summit store is set to feature a coffee shop and bar area that is connected to the retail space, but removed enough to have an independent vibe, he said, noting the Plaza’s coffee option is perceived as a retail add-on, as opposed to a destination of its own.

Made in KC Marketplace, Country Club Plaza

Made in KC Marketplace, Country Club Plaza

“We hope to have more of a traditional coffee shop where people will want to come and hang out, work — not necessarily feel the need to shop [the retail space] while they’re with us,” McIntyre said, also emphasizing that a large walk-in refrigerator will boost the selection of beer on tap in the bar area. “The coffee shop and bar component will have their own sense of space with a big garage door that opens to a massive patio. The option to consume in that space will be much more inviting and offer more variety.”

Evolving and expanding Made in KC beyond its existing bounds was in the works before 2020 and the COVID-19 retail challenges that followed in the new year, he noted, expressing little reluctance to move forward with the new iterations in Lee’s Summit and at Martini Corner.

“We decided they were good deals beforehand and would be good deals after,” he said. “We’ll just try to get between those two points as smoothly as possible, but we’re still very excited about everything we have on our plate right now.”

[adinserter block="4"]

2020 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Video: KC women in tech talk challenges, engagement

    By Tommy Felts | June 30, 2015

    While Kansas City ranks as a top locale for ladies in technology, there’s still work to be done to create more gender diversity in the industry. This video — created in collaboration with Kansas City Public Television and videographer Brad Austin — explores some of the challenges that women face in a male-dominated field and how to engage more women…

    3 local businessmen named EY’s Entrepreneur of the Year

    By Tommy Felts | June 30, 2015

    Three Kansas City area businesspeople recently snagged one of the most prestigious awards for entrepreneurs. EY announced Monday the winners of the Entrepreneur of the Year 2015 for the central Midwest, which included three businessmen from the Kansas City metro area. Those receiving the commendation included: Jody Brazil, CEO of FireMon; Matthew Perry, President of…

    Women flex their tech muscles at KC conference

    By Tommy Felts | June 29, 2015

    Framed by a LEGO guitar and robotic vehicle, Rheanne Walton and Emma Howard anxiously review notes at their podium as dozens of technology experts await their pitch. The middle-school students are visiting the Kansas City Developers Conference to share the story of their all-girl robotics team, MindSTEM, and how it competes in the FIRST LEGO…

    New lab hopes to boost digital inclusion in Kansas City

    By Tommy Felts | June 29, 2015

    A new computer lab in Northeast Kansas City hopes to serve as a tech oasis in a digital desert among low-income households. Google donated and opened the new lab Monday in Chouteau Court, furthering the company’s mission to help bridge the area’s digital divide through education about computers and Internet use. Rachel Hack Merlo, Google…