Pure Workplace Solutions

Grocer's Warehouse complex sells to Taing Capital Group

The Grocer’s Warehouse complex, anchored by Hufft Architecture and Fabrication in the historic Roanoke Park neighborhood of Kansas City, Mo., has sold to Taing Capital Group, LLC.

Originally a manufacturing facility built in 1949 by Kansas City grocer Fred Wolferman, the iconic building was redeveloped into creative office and living space in 2015. The 60,000 SF building has seven commercial tenant spaces and studio loft apartments.

Hufft plans to remain in its current space as the GW anchor, along with the other tenants including Studio Lofts, Real Fitness & Conditioning, Pure Workplace Solutions, Roanoke Park Conservancy, MEDiAHEAD and ZancTank Concepts.

“We have realized our master plan for the Grocer’s Warehouse campus and properties. It has been a phenomenal process to see it transform. While our primary roles lie in running Hufft, we were ready for a group to take over the management and all of the responsibilities that come with that. We are very much looking forward to staying a part of the GW campus and Roanoke Park for a long time. The Roanoke Park Conservancy is really to be credited for their efforts in making this location a desired place to work and live. That group holds the original visionaries that believed in this beautiful area of Kansas City,” said Hufft co-founder and principal, Jesse Hufft.

Logan Freeman of Clemons Real Estate and Parker Webb with Third Space Property Group represented the buyer and Pat Murfey of Evergreen Real Estate Services represented the seller in the June 2020 transaction.

"This was a great collaboration between the current ownership group and the new buyers. It was definitely an uphill battle with the pandemic and commercial tenants being a large percentage of the rental income. Securing financing was tricky, but we had a local lender step up who believed in the project as much as we do. Both sides worked together great and are going to continue this vision for the Grocer’s Warehouse and the surrounding Roanoke Park area," Freeman said.

Read previous Grocer’s Warehouse stories by MWM here:

July 2019

Sept 2017

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.

Grocers Warehouse Development adds commercial office space to Midtown KC

The Grocers Warehouse development is continuing its expansion, adding four new commercial office spaces for lease, ranging from 1,500-4,200 SF.

The mixed-use community, which existed as grocery distribution facilities in the early 1940s, is comprised of two buildings located at 3525 Roanoke Road and 3612 Karnes Boulevard. The site offers picturesque views and convenient access to one of Kansas City’s finest green spaces- Roanoke Park.

"The Midtown location is unique, just minutes from both the 39th Street Shops and Restaurants and I- 35, yet nestled into a park setting. With both residential and commercial use, the development has an energy both day and night, every day of the week," said Jesse Hufft, principal and co-founder of Hufft, who is overseeing the expansion's design and fabrication.

Anchored by Hufft, the current campus tenants also include ZancTank Corporate Office (locally known as Red Door Grill), Roanoke Park Conservancy, MEDiAHEAD, PURE Workplace Solutions, Real Fitness and Conditioning and the Studio Loft Apartments.

“Preserving and finding new uses for existing buildings can prove to be a labor of love; however, the increased property value and positive synergy from a creative community translate into good business,” Hufft principal, Matthew Hufft said.

For tours or leasing inquiries, email info@grocerswarehousekc.com. More photos can be viewed here: ADDITIONAL PHOTOS.