Monday, December 29, 2008

From the West Bottoms to the Power and Blight district, you can smell the smoke.

" We cross our bridges when we come to them and burn them behind us, with nothing to show for our progress except a memory of the smell of smoke, and a presumption that once our eyes watered" Tom Stoppard said that, not me, but I couldn't have said it better. Kansas City's West Bottoms is that "memory of smoke". When you drive over the 12th street viaduct, with downtown in your rear view mirror, the West Bottoms spreads out to either side of you. It's a grimy, decaying, redheaded stepchild left behind when it had outlived it's usefulness. If you just give the area a quick glance, and were asked to describe it in one word, the word would most likely be, Ugly. Kemper Arena sits mostly idle, nothing more than a once a year barn for FFA kids from Wichita or Tulsa, and a sometime giant parking lot so people can shuttle to events at the new Sprint Arena, the usurper and centerpiece of what passes for progress in this city.
(click pics to enlarge)
Kemper Arena could implode tomorrow for all I care, it never had any character or real history. The countless other buildings are a different matter. Mostly brick, some with elaborate entrances, every one with character and history, even the ones that are falling in on themselves.
The signs painted long ago, fading in the brick, are the DNA markers of this city. We helped feed the nation out of the West Bottoms, from the stockyards to the dozens of farm machinery and implement distributors. The city up the hill reaped the rewards and spent the proceeds in the name of progress. Nothing wrong with that, this city thrived, but somewhere along the line someone lost the true definition of progress. They gutted 6 or 8 blocks of history Downtown and replaced it with chain bars and restaurants that sat all but empty on the long holiday Saturday afternoon when I passed through. If you want to eat an elk steak, or ride a mechanical bull then this is nirvana, you have found your home. If it sounds like I'm saying I preferred looking at run down buildings rather than overpriced fad bars, you would be correct. But the P&L district didn't cause the deterioration of the West Bottoms, it just helped nail down the last few nails.

A commenter suggested I take my camera to the west bottoms while it was still there. He also called me a dirt bag, he arguably made a good point on both counts. He also wished me luck, so I'm taking the dirt bag reference as a term of endearment, and will fore go offering up the obligatory "Blow Me" response. But he is right, it wont be long before the majority of the old buildings are torn down, or fall down, another bit of evidence of what this city once was, erased.



There are still some businesses in the bottoms. The haunted houses that operate for a couple of months a year, a couple of Lumber Wholesale yards, and others. Ill conceived night clubs come and go, a few buildings converted to artists loft space. A Cricket cellular store, a couple of restaurants and gas stations. By and large the area doesn't produce enough revenue for the city to bother with, so it crumbles, while the wheels of progress churn up the hill. I know as sure as I write this, someone is going to tell me the West Bottoms are thriving, going through a renaissance. That's got a nice ring to it, but it ain't true. It's just a matter of time, progress.

As I was leaving after taking these shots I noticed two steel plates halfway up the 12th street bridge were sitting crooked, out of position in the middle of the bridge. I stopped rather than drive over it. There was a foot wide gap spanning the width of the bridge, you could see to the road below. Further evidence of the lack of concern from city hall. So from the Ghost of progress past, we travel to the facade of progress present...................................... to be continued

19 comments:

  1. I hate to see the old buildings decaying.

    This has nothing to do with West Bottoms, but about six years ago my daughter and I decided to take her kids to the top of City Hall and look over the city. Even City Hall was in a state of decay! I'd hate to see what it's like now.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I went to one of these bars in W.Bottoms few month ago. It looked like a set up for a Freddie Kruger movie, dark, no people, train suddenly pops out from the fog. Jerry Woodsweather's pictured here has very good hamburgers. Recommended if you can find it.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I keep hoping that the artists who have been priced out of the crossroads will claim the West Bottoms. I hate to see those beautiful old buildings go into dust. We don't know how to make them like those anymore.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hey - I saw the Rolling Stones (twice) at Kemper. I still contend it was a better arena than Sprint and sure as hell better parking...oh well...

    Hoping the city gets the message about the 12th street bridge and applies for part of the stimulus..unless they are too busy with lawsuits of course.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I am not big on gentrification, but if any area is screaming for being razed and given the Quality Hill-type treatment, it's this one.

    ReplyDelete
  6. There's some good stuff going on in the West Bottoms. The Livestock Exchange Building is one of the coolest in the city, and it's full of small businesses and some artists. Also, the Dolphin gallery is down there now.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I agree with Joe. The Livestock Exchange Building is a historical treasure owned by Bill Haw who is fiercely committed to the historic preservation of the building. As a tenant, I can vouch for the great spirit of this building and the tenants.

    As for the Kemper Arena, why not turn it into a huge water park tourist destination for locals and convention/downtown visitors.

    Also there is plenty of space in the Bottoms to locate a recycling center. Most loft or apartment dwellers have no way to recycle and since Bridging the Gap lost the midtown location, there is no local place to bring glass and other recyling materials.

    The West Bottoms is the perfect location for incredibly easy highway access for both Kansas and Missouri. City access is fine via 12th St., Woodswether Road, James St., Beardsley Road or Cesar Chavez Drive.

    A new mayor with vision could make this happen.

    ReplyDelete
  8. MM, you are very right about the West Bottoms. Despite the good intentioned efforts of the last 2 decades, that area keeps falling further and further into ruin. Since I first came home from college 20 years ago, I would bet a third of the buildings in that area have been demolished.
    Sure some new structures have been built and others given a facelift, but between the repeated visits of the Missouri flood waters and the fires set either accidently by vagrants or purposefully by arsonists that area suffers a larger and larger net loss.
    At the rate the Bottoms are eroding, I'm betting in another 20 years all we'll have left are photos of what once stood there.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Kemper Arena has a character and history to those who only missed one Kansas City Kings home game in the early eighties and remember what it was like to have winning sports teams in Kansas City.

    ReplyDelete
  10. you have a point L A.

    SOB
    watch it or I'll do another blight tour of JOCO.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Many of the photographs in this entry are similar, if not exactly the same, as the photographs I once took of this area last summer. I enjoy the emptiness of it, the forlorn exactitudes of forgotten brick and steel. I love the empty streets. I especially love those items, like trash bins, placed in those areas of the street that, on any other street, would be impractical and dangerous. The West Bottoms is the earth gone sad. I shall visit there again this weekend.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Sprint took over the old Gateway location, but rumor has it Sprint will be putting many heads on the chopping block this spring, so who knows if that location will remain occupied. "Kansas City Restaurant Supply" just build a huge, brand new metal warehouse on the north side of 670 near the Wendy's/gas station. The recycling idea is a good one. The hitch is the recycling commodity market has collapsed & recycling centers across the city are closing. Deffenbaugh won't pick the stuff up for free anymore because it's not worth as much as it once was. Recycling will now have to be subsidized. Good post!

    ReplyDelete
  13. One more casualty of the West Bottoms is the closing of Sutera's. They have a sign on the door that they have now closed after 30 years and will only have their restaurant in Westwood open.

    ReplyDelete
  14. What if anything would actually function in the West Bottoms today? It's in a flood plain ringed by train tracks and highway overpasses. About the only thing that work was the original purposes for the space, industrial and warehousing businesses. But those type of businesses moved out long ago never to return.
    The Bottoms really are a place in need of a purpose.

    ReplyDelete
  15. It is sad about the West Bottoms, and the even sader is thta those metal plates on 12th St. have been there for almost two years!

    ReplyDelete
  16. the 12th street bridge. you can feel some of the slabs rock when your walking across it and a bus or big truck is crossing.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Thanks for the mention of the Livestock Exchange Building. Googled it and found its site, looked at its slideshow. What a beautiful building! It looks like the restoration was a quality one.

    ReplyDelete
  18. To anon.
    There is a recycle center in the west bottoms that has been there for twenty some odd years. It is the Surplus Exchange. Bridging the Gap is still taking items that are not electronic but The Surplus Exchange takes electronics office items, office furniture. By the way, it is the one place in KC that allows nothing to go to landfill or outside the boundaries of the US. And it is a great place to buy a nice desk on the cheap.

    ReplyDelete
  19. Thanks for the mention of the Livestock Exchange Building. Googled it and found its site, looked at its slideshow. What a beautiful building! It looks like the restoration was a quality one.

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.