WISE Power shifts energy from Hy-Vee Arena to Sporting KC, debuting cutting-edge tech lounge March 7

February 19, 2020  |  Tommy Felts

A new partnership with Sporting KC gives a Kansas City-founded startup naming rights to the new WISE Power Shield Club at Children’s Mercy Park, as well as a new lease on its emerging entertainment concept previously set to debut at the Hy-Vee Arena.

[pullquote]

What is WISE Power?

WISE Power technology works by allowing homeowners, building owners, facility managers, and anyone who manages a building’s power supply to store energy from the grid or renewables to use later as needed.

[/pullquote]

“WISE Power has designed technology products and services that are incredibly innovative and stylish,” said Jon Moses, Sporting KC vice president of corporate partnerships. “We’re integrating those same essential elements in the Wise Power Shield Club with an exciting new look and feel this year for guests to enjoy.” 

Founded in Kansas City by serial entrepreneur Kevin Williams, the company’s intelligent energy systems store electricity to power homes and businesses, as well as a new “WISE Power Pack” storage system to power electric vehicles. The new tech lounge is expected to showcase Wise Power’s products, demonstrate its capabilities and train its distributor community, Williams said.

The startup relocated its leadership team to Las Vegas in late 2019, though it remained committed to the Kansas City showroom concept, he said.

Wise Power Shield Club at Children's Mercy Park

Wise Power Shield Club at Children’s Mercy Park

Click here to learn more about WISE Power.

Set for a March 7 kickoff alongside Sporting KC’s home opener, the lounge offers a climate-controlled space featuring floor-to-ceiling windows with a midfield view of the pitch. Amenities include a SportingStyle retail location, such local food and drink options as Port Fonda, American Royal Barbecue and J. Rieger & Co., and an outdoor patio for pre-match festivities.

With a phased rollout already in motion, WISE Power plans to continue customizing the space throughout the season with completion slated for later this summer.

An evolving concept in motion

Previously envisioned as the WISE Power Lounge at Hy-Vee Arena, the sports-meets-tech leisure space arrives more than a year after the planned opening of a similar concept at the former Kemper Arena.

Kevin Williams and Brittany Williams, WISE Power

Kevin Williams and Brittany Williams, WISE Power

Efforts to open a public, 9,000-square-foot lounge in the retrofitted recreation complex in the West Bottoms hit a bottleneck, Williams said, leaving WISE Power unable to move forward.

“We were not able to finalize the arrangement due to some important details; like parking. There was a real possibility that customers would have to pay to park just to enter the business,” he said. “We wish the Hy-Vee Arena well, but we came to realize it was not a good fit for the WISE Power Lounge.”

Click here to read more about the previously planned space at Hy-Vee Arena.

Ultimately, the WISE Power Lounge concept evolved into what the team is now calling Motions Tap Room, Williams said.

“We have an international franchise agreement to expand Motions beginning with stores in the Las Vegas market,” he said. 

Williams’ daughter, Brittany, who was instrumental in planning the WISE Power Lounge at Hy-Vee Arena, now leads the Motions business division. 

What happens in Vegas might not stay in Vegas

WISE Power’s recent relocation to Las Vegas doesn’t represent a permanent geographic pivot, Williams said. Instead, the move is an attempt to capitalize on available resources and incentives to help the startup reach its most immediate and long-term goals, he said.

Kevin Williams, founder of WillCo Technologies and WISE Power Inc

“We found the need to move our residence to the Las Vegas market and establish an Opportunity Zone location to gain access to capital,” Williams said. “We tried for a couple of years to attract funds from the local VC community with no success. We continued to grow using some crowdfunding capital, but mostly self-funding.”

Williams previously exited from Willco Technologies, a cybersecurity firm he sold in 2017 to focus on WISE Power.

The energy storage startup is maintaining its Kansas City presence through existing office space on College Boulevard in Overland Park, he said, part of a plan to eventually return to the metro in a big way. 

“We have a go-to-market strategy that will use a KC area Opportunity Zone location as our headquarters and a national distribution center,” he said. “The strategy requires a $25 million expansion plan and we have secured 90 percent of the equity capital.”

WISE Power is still seeking $1.5 million to $2.5 million in sidecar funding, Williams said.

[divide]

This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.

For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn

[adinserter block="4"]

2020 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    SNAP cuts are ‘worse than they look on paper’: Food access advocates warn shelves could go bare overnight

    By Tommy Felts | September 16, 2025

    Chef Shanita McAfee-Bryant doesn’t mince words about perceptions of the hungry Kansas Citians she serves daily through her award-winning culinary social venture. “These are the people who — if you listen to the rhetoric — are deemed ‘lazy,’” the founder of The Prospect KC’s NourishKC Community Kitchen told Startland News. “We know the narratives being…

    LISTEN: Fermenting a clean future through products from meat alternatives to skin creams and baby formula

    By Tommy Felts | September 13, 2025

    On this episode of Startland News’ Plug and Play Topeka founder podcast series, we chat with Francesca Gallucci of Natáur, a Baltimore-based biotech company that’s reimagining how essential nutrients are made. Combining synthetic biology, metabolic engineering, and eco-friendly fermentation, they’re producing bio-based taurine (and other naturally occurring sulfur compounds) without relying on petroleum. Gallucci takes…

    KCMO slashes fees for outdoor dining permits, launches dining trail for grant winning projects

    By Tommy Felts | September 12, 2025

    Kansas City has officially eliminated outdoor dining permit fees, reducing the cost from $850 to zero, thanks to the momentum created by a city-led initiative to encourage investment in outdoor dining experiences, city leaders announced this week, unveiling new plans to promote funded businesses and their projects.  Launched in 2024, the Outdoor Dining Enhancement Program…

    World Cup will produce KC small biz millionaires in just weeks, leaders say, but it’s only the start

    By Tommy Felts | September 12, 2025

    Kansas City can’t look at the World Cup in 2026 as one big event where businesses are going to make good money for a while, and then everything goes back to normal, said Wes Rogers.  “This has to be the beginning of the next chapter of our city,” the 2nd District Councilman for Kansas City,…