In Kansas City’s historic West Bottoms neighborhood, HOK and S9 Architecture are working with Somera Road to design a $527-million, mixed-use development that includes apartments, offices, retail, a boutique hotel and open public space.
The site’s history—as the center of the city’s cattle trade—was the focus of a recent article in the New York Times exploring how stockyards have become a target for investment and redevelopment.
“In Kansas City, the American Royal Livestock Show is breaking ground on a new $350 million, 127-acre suburban home. The West Bottoms neighborhood, where the stock show once stood, is the focus of a $500-million investment. Ian Ross, the founder of Somera Road, the West Bottoms’ developer, said the project is modeled on the Dumbo neighborhood of Brooklyn where, after decades of abandonment, rundown warehouses were reborn as galleries and work spaces starting in the 1980s.”
The project aims to infuse the landmark district with density while preserving its historic fabric. The development of the six-block, 26-acre site centers around a large public gathering space and involves both renovation and new construction.
“The West Bottoms was where Kansas City was born, where the cattle trade began,” Ross told the Times. “I think people are seeking those authentic, story-driven neighborhoods and are eager to help bring them back to life, unlike these new, somewhat sterile mixed-use developments.”
Read the full story in the New York Times.