Office

Thrasher to build new HQ at Southlake Office Park

Construction has begun on a new KC office headquarters for Thrasher Foundation Repair, a midwest foundation repair company, at Southlake Office Park in Lenexa, Kan.

The five-acre site, acquired from developer City+Ventures, is located near I-35 and Renner Blvd. and will serve as Thrasher’s new, 25,000-SF Kansas City headquarters, providing both office and warehouse space.

“Southlake Office Park continues to see significant momentum and interest from a variety of users,” said Chris Erickson, co-founder of City+Ventures.

“The demand for quality space in a prime location such as this is driving market activity for the region. We enthusiastically welcome Thrasher and are excited for the future of Southlake.”

JLL, who represents City+Ventures at Southlake, plans for investing in new building amenities, providing Class-A common areas and tenant finishes and developing the interior land sites with complimentary uses for the existing office tenants.

Southlake has additional land available for purchase, ranging from three to 15 acres or for build-to-suit opportunities. This is the second tract sold at the Southlake Office Park this year, following JLL’s completed sale of a 3.6-acre site for a new VA clinic in January 2020.

Southlake offers a variety of options for businesses with both Class A and B office offerings, flex space for companies requiring warehouse or loading capabilities, and 45 acres for development. The park has an on-site daycare center, on-site management office, the Lenexa Conference Center and the Lenexa Chamber of Commerce, and is strategically located in the center of Johnson County with easy access to I-35, I-435 and K-10 Highways.

Current amenities include three miles of walking trails, 10 well-stocked ponds, redundant high-speed fiber and dual power feeds. New amenities and upgrades to the properties have commenced construction this year, including Class-A common areas and tenant finishes, new monument signage for the entire park, new exterior painting of the Tech Center buildings, updated landscaping and the development of interior land sites with complimentary uses for the existing office tenants.

The design/construction team for Thrasher Foundation Repair project is comprised of Ryan Companies, TACK Architecture and Sidekick Development.

Established in 1975, Thrasher Foundation Repair is a part of Thrasher Group and does basement waterproofing, foundation repair, and concrete repair based out of Omaha, Neb., with regional locations in Wichita, Kansas City, Des Moines, Sioux City and Grand Island.

For more information about Southlake Office Park properties, please contact RJ Trowbridge at rj.trowbridge@am.jll.com.

The project, which is currently under construction, has an anticipated completion date of Q3 2021.

Office, retail plans emerge to replace former Macy's

A massive, mixed-use vision has emerged for a state-of-the-art renovation to transform the empty Macy’s at 7000 Mission Road in Prairie Village, Kan.

Maryland-based First Washington Realty (FWR) plans to create a 120,000 SF, multi-tenant anchor space for the three-story building, which has sat empty since fall 2019.

The proposed redevelopment includes two levels of retail on Levels 1 and 2. The Offices of the Village would occupy Level 3 and include nearly 39,000 SF of space which can be demised down to as low as 11,000 SF, according to Mike Levitan and Tim Schaffer with AREA Real Estate Advisors, who are leading the office leasing efforts. Depending upon the configuration, tenants would also have access to their own private outdoor terraces.

The new development plans highlight the built-in convenience of dozens of nearby restaurants, retail and grocery shops, salons, a florist, banks and more. Only footsteps away are Tavern in the Village, Dolce Bakery, Cafe Provence, Hen House, TCBY and Rise Biscuits & Donuts, to name a few.

FWR currently owns 103 shopping areas valued at over $5.5 billion in 22 states. Local shopping centers include Brookside Shops, Corinth Square North, Shops at Fairway, Shops of Prairie Village and coming soon - Corinth Quarter.

According to minutes from the Oct. 5, 2020 Prairie Village city council meeting, representatives from First Washington Realty met with Prairie Village mayor Eric Mikkelson and city staff to discuss how the former department store space could be utilized.

If passed, the proposal estimates a completion date for the renovation by spring 2021.

Ryan Companies opens new KC office

Ryan Companies has officially moved into its new Kansas City office on a second-floor suite of the Interstate Securities Building/Topsy Building at 215 E 18th St. in downtown Kansas City, Mo.

The construction and real estate development firm has been working in the KC market for 15 years, but it wasn’t until 2018 that they established a physical presence in the city.

The 3,213 SF office is designed to seat 16 employees, with room to expand up to 24. The building was built in 1950 and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

The decision to further invest in the Kansas City market was ultimately made because of their success that has come out of the last decade and a half paired with a great outlook for decades to come, according to Ryan's marketing team.

“We’re stoked to be in another one of 3D Development’s and Lankford Fendler’s projects. True to fashion, they continue to outdo themselves and we can’t wait to pour an Irish pint (or two) when we have our official open house. In the meantime, give us a ring, bring a mask and come check out our new digs! You’ll love our Northwoods fireplace (in the winter) and the view from the rooftop the next time the temperature drops,” said Aaron Schlagel, vice president – real estate development, midwest region for Ryan Companies.

Ryan Companies also announced the relocation of  Craig Thompson, vice president of construction, from its Des Moines, Iowa offices to its new office in Kansas City.

“I want to help build something in Kansas City that will continue for years to come. In Des Moines, we were able to grow the office by four times what it was when we began. With Kansas City being a bigger market, the sky is the limit for what we can do here,” said Thompson.

Thompson, who just celebrated his 20-year anniversary with Ryan Companies, will help lead the growth of Ryan’s rapidly expanding team and presence in Kansas City.

Ryan Companies’ noteworthy local projects include Commerce Tower, St. Luke’s Community Hospital in Shawnee, Kan.) and multiple projects for Target and Amazon. The company will focus on real estate development while continuing to provide construction services.

PURE and simple ways to prepare for office return

As you read this, you’re probably sitting at your dining room table, your living room sofa or some make-shift office in your home.  It may not be designed to be as efficient as your office’s workspace and it may lack good ergonomics, but it is comfortable and safe and you have learned to adapt to your environment to be productive.   

Since forever in time, office spaces existed so that employers could create “work-focused” environments, where productivity could be managed, where workers could communicate more effectively and where collaboration and camaraderie are encouraged.   

In recent years, however, as mobile technologies advanced, more progressive companies embraced the idea of teleworking as a significant way to save in real estate costs and as a way to attract a more mobile and diverse workforce.  Yet, for some industries, and for some businesses, the idea of a full-time remote workforce is still years away. In 2018, less than 25% of the U.S. workforce worked some hours from home on an average day.   

The COVID-19 pandemic, and stay-at-home mandates, thrust all of us into the workplace of the future.  Everyone quickly learned how to create a work-focused enclave in their home.  We learned how to adjust our behaviors and our expectations. And by now we all realize that we can perform our work using a myriad of remote devices.  And technology, not proximity, allows us to communicate, as well as collaborate.  

Unfortunately, the future is not here, and many of us will be going back to the office within the next few weeks.  If COVID-19 is still transmittable, how can workers be expected to go back to the office? What will our employers do to our office environment to reduce the spread of pathogens?  How can we make sure that our co-workers remain respectful of our personal space and continue to social distance? Will it be the same? 

As employers prepare for the end of the quarantine and the work-from-home experiment comes to an end, our fears are providing good fodder for designers, workplace consultants and office furniture manufacturers. 

In the not-so-distant future, workplace design may be reflective of the lessons learned during the pandemic of 2020. There is no reason to delay. In the short-term, employers can make some immediate changes, making the workplace appreciably safer, with little associated cost.

Employers will need to strengthen the distinction between private and shared space. Over the last decade, these lines have blurred and employees will begin to demand more privacy in order to feel safe while doing their work.    Employers can make available more private/restricted areas where employees can go to feel safe, protected, and in control of their environment. 

In the open plan work areas, employers can increase the distance between workers by spreading them further apart or by flipping the orientation of their desks. Shared “hot-desking” should become a thing of the past.  It will be essential in some cases to add cleanable/wipeable privacy screens to help reduce the transmission of pathogens via droplets or aerosolized particles.

With the shrinking of personal workspaces over the years, offices have incorporated collaboration spaces for thought-sharing, idea generation and social interaction.   These will continue to be critical to maintain the moral and productivity of employees working in already cramped personal spaces.  

But how will these look post-COVID-19? The size of collaboration spaces may shrink to limit the number of people using them.  Some collaboration spaces may even have restricted uses to control the number of people who have access.  Furniture may be spread further apart and be designed with antimicrobial fabrics and finishes for easy cleaning. Cleaning supplies could be readily available for users to clean potentially contaminated surfaces.  Improved air filtration systems can be installed to help eliminate the spread of airborne pathogens. 

Employers should consider placing sanitizer dispensing stations throughout the office, especially in social or shared spaces and near break rooms and bathrooms. Over the past month we’ve become accustomed to having antibacterial sanitizers within arm’s reach, at the grocery store, in our automobiles, our purses or bags and around our home.  We are already beginning to change our behavior.  Company-provided sanitizer stations are an effective and inexpensive way to encourage better hygiene.  

Businesses should adopt or modify workplace policies regarding better hygiene, workspace cleanliness, and safe-distancing. Stricter guidelines should be implemented forbidding an employee to come into the office if they, or someone in their family, is a carrier of a potentially contagious virus.  Adopting teleworking protocols after COVID-19 should be an easy first step in increasing employer’s openness to allowing remote work while an employee is convalescing or caring for others.   

Environmental branding companies and flooring manufacturers are quickly innovating products that can be integrated into the interior design of a workspace that will provide visual cues, reminding people of safe social distancing, encouraging hand-washing, and that route people through an office in a way that mitigates the risk of transmission of viruses. These product will help keep our workplace essentially the same, but they will be a constant reminder to everyone how expectations have changed the way we work. 

Many of these products are available for immediate application and the ideas are simple to implement. Employees returning to the office will want to find that their workplace is safe, but that the “new-normal” is still a place where work gets done, is fun and where co-workers can engage and share ideas.  The key to the efficacy of any solution will be in how we change our behaviors and tendencies. 

Jean-Paul Wong is president/CEO of PURE Workplace Solutions, located at 3525 Roanoke Rd in Kansas City, Mo. PURE provides commercial furniture solutions and workplace consulting for all work environments including office, healthcare, education, hospitality and government. 

If you are interested in submitting a guest column for MWM Newsletter publication, please send to lisa@metrowiremedia.com for consideration.

Miller Stauch Construction shares love for KC, HQ projects

Miller Stauch Construction is currently working with Schier Products to build their new office headquarters at the corner of Woodland Drive and Shawnee Mission Parkway in Shawnee Mission, Ks.

The 52,000 SF building will include a combined office and warehouse space for the grease interceptor manufacturer's approximate 50 employees, who will be moving into their new state-of-the-art headquarters, designed by GBA, upon completion later this year.

But that's not the only office headquarters project Miller Stauch has working in KC.

First Heritage Bank and doorLink Manufacturing will also move into new office headquarters later this year, thanks to Miller Stauch, who is about to reach a milestone century of working in KC.

“Miller Stauch Construction has been building Kansas City for over 95 years. We love Kansas City and are proud to do our part to establish new homes for our clients,” said Grace Elmore, marketing manager for Miller Stauch.

First Heritage Bank, who currently has five locations in Kansas, is working with Miller Stauch and

Davidson Architecture & Engineering, to build their newest branch in the heart of Lenexa, Ks. The new HQ location includes 5,500 SF of space and will house the bank’s commercial banking division.

Residential and commercial door manufacturer, doorLink Manufacturing, will be moving into their new headquarters later this year as well. The new space includes 240,000 SF of office, manufacturing and distribution space in Riverside, Mo.

"Kansas City is rapidly growing and is making a name for itself on the national stage. Companies are planting their roots here, which is exciting to both participate in and experience,” said Greg Dean, director of business development for Miller Stauch.

Miller Stauch is an expert in the retail, office and industrial markets and has completed several similar projects in Kansas City over the years. This includes an 80,000 SF industrial office building for North American Safety Valve, completed in 2018.

"GBA has worked with Miller Stauch Construction for 35 years on many successful projects in the industrial/manufacturing sector. We truly enjoy the long-term partnership among their team and ours," Craig Rogge, principal for the GBA buildings group, said.