JCCC

Kansas City Industrial Growth: Smarter Sites, Stronger Collaboration

MetroWire Media closed out its 2025 programming with a standout KC MWM Industrial Summit, hosted at Johnson County Community College. With rising construction costs, evolving tenant expectations, and major infrastructure needs, our expert panel explored what’s driving Kansas City’s industrial momentum—and how the region is positioning for what’s next.

Special thanks to our sponsors who made this event possible:

Platinum Sponsors: JE Dunn Construction, Miller Stauch Construction
Bronze Sponsors: Bartlett & West, ARCO, Seal-O-Matic, Armstrong
Brew Crew Sponsors: Capitol Federal, KC SmartPort, BHC, studioNorth Architecture

What Makes KC Competitive?

Chris Gutierrez of KC SmartPort opened the conversation: “Every company that comes here asks how we got Missouri and Kansas in the same room from the start. That collaboration is our edge.” He emphasized KC’s multimodal freight infrastructure, industrial developer base, and workforce reliability as top selling points.

Construction Cost Pressure and Preconstruction Strategy

Ryan Schroeder of Russell Construction pointed to a slowdown in private investment due to high interest rates, but stressed that early collaboration is a winning formula: “Clients want cost and schedule certainty. That means contractors must be involved from the design phase, not just at bid time.”

Above: Attendees at MetroWire Media’s 2025 Industrial Summit listen in as the panel discusses the current state of Kansas City’s industrial real estate market. Image | BGSTUDIOS PHOTOGRAPHY + FILM

Speculative vs. Build-to-Suit: Staying Disciplined

Brent Peterson of NAI Heartland provided perspective from the leasing and capital markets side: “KC has been disciplined about what we build, and that’s why we’re still absorbing. Most activity today is build-to-suit, but spec buildings remain vital—especially smaller footprints under 500,000 SF.”

Infrastructure Is Now a Front-End Issue

Krizia Diaz, leading JE Dunn’s industrial manufacturing sector, discussed how “pad-ready” doesn’t always mean infrastructure-ready: “We’re helping clients pivot mid-project to phase development or self-supply utilities like wastewater treatment or power generation. That shifts design, cost, and timeline significantly.”

Flexibility in Design: The New Standard

Kevin Polit of studioNorth Architecture explained how flexible shell buildings support long-term utility: “You’re not just designing for one tenant anymore. You’re building a platform that can support automation, manufacturing, cold storage, or ESG upgrades over decades.”

John Krudwig of Bartlett & West agreed, adding: “We’re designing spec with build-to-suit in mind—high-performing roof structures, flat floors, even modular under-slab systems for future use. It’s more rewarding, more strategic.”

Automation Expectations Are Real—and Rising

Karley Felz, an automation systems expert, shared how tenant demands are shifting: “Automation is no longer optional. With labor tight, tenants want high-speed connectivity, stronger slabs, and wider column spacing. We’re seeing higher employee satisfaction too—robots aren’t replacing people, they’re supporting them.”

Data Centers: Boon or Bottleneck?

The discussion turned to KC’s growing data center market. With Meta and Google investing billions, power availability is now a gating factor. “These aren’t one-and-done builds,” said Gutierrez. “They upgrade every two years. But they also generate secondary demand—construction, manufacturing, automation. It’s an ecosystem.”

Panelists noted the need for better long-term planning around power generation, with Kevin Polit citing innovations like small modular nuclear reactors as viable mid-term solutions. Brent Peterson explained that the “$100 billion” data center numbers are cumulative over decades, reflecting upgrades, infrastructure, and equipment, not just construction.

Above: Guests mingle at the MWM 2025 Industrial Summit at Johnson County Community College before the panel discussion.

Looking Ahead: Where's the Growth?

The panel identified I-35 south of Olathe, Liberty/Northland, and Lee’s Summit as key corridors for future development. “We need more product,” said Gutierrez. “When interest rates drop, we’ll need those buildings ready to go.”

John Krudwig confirmed that multiple spec projects are in design across the region. Peterson added: “Post-2008, speculative development changed our market. If you build it—smartly—they will come.”

The Workforce Pipeline Starts Now

Several panelists praised Kansas City’s workforce development infrastructure, with Ryan Schroeder sharing a personal anecdote about a Rockhurst student exploring trade school: “This generation sees the trades differently—and we should be encouraging that.”

In Closing: Collaboration Remains KC’s Superpower

Angela Dicioccio, MetroWire’s Event Director, wrapped the event: “What makes Kansas City work is the collaboration between developers, designers, builders, and economic partners. We’re already planning for 2026—and with the World Cup coming, Kansas City is about to take the global stage.”


Header image: Panelists discuss what's driving the Industrial real estate market in the Kansas City region at MetroWire Media's 2025 Industrial Summit at the Regnier Center- Johnson County Community College. Image | BGSTUDIOS PHOTOGRAPHY + FILM

Cool and steady climb wins the race for KC industrial market

Cool and steady climb wins the race for KC industrial market

Feature photo credit: Arch Photo KC

Donald E. Maxwell, attorney & developer

As one of next week's MWM’s KC Market Forecast Summit panelists, attorney and developer Donald (Don) E. Maxwell will weigh in on what's in store for the Kansas City commercial real estate industry in 2022 and beyond.

Besides being a lifetime Kansas Citian (Grandview High School graduate) and successful attorney, Maxwell is also co-owner of the development company Linwood Investors, LLC with his father, Donald Maxwell. The pair created the vision behind the Bluford Library revitalization project on 31st and Prospect in Kansas City, Mo.

The mixed-use concept, currently pending final financial approval, will consist of the demolition and reconstruction of the Bluford Library to a two-story, 22,000-SF facility with rooftop access.

The layout, designed by Helix Architecture + Design, will include approximately 5,000 SF of dedicated restaurant space; approximately 100,000 SF of office space; three multifamily buildings, totaling 199 units of studio, one- and two-bedroom apartment units; approximately 30,000 SF of retail space; a dedicated clubhouse for the multifamily residents; and three, six-unit townhomes.

"The Bluford Project, upon completion, will serve as a catalyst for continued development on Kansas City’s east side. We hope to attract working families who want to live, work and play in Kansas City’s urban core and provide the essential goods and services they need to maintain a healthy standard of living. By doing so, we hope to create a positive impact on the quality of life of all the residents in the neighborhoods surrounding this project," Maxwell said.

Other recent revitalization projects behind the Linwood Investors duo include the $11 million redevelopment of the Linwood Square Shopping Center (completed in 2020) and a $17 million redevelopment of the Linwood Shopping Center (completed in 2018), both blighted retail strip centers in the Linwood-Prospect corridor located on Kansas City’s east side.

As the owner of the law firm, Donald E. Maxwell, LLC, which he began in 2003, Maxwell's areas of expertise include general corporate matters, estate planning and real estate - including residential and commercial real estate development; contract negotiation; public financing, including tax increment financing; low-income tax credits, historic tax credits, new markets tax credits; HUD financing; Central City sales tax financing; commercial lease negotiations; restrictive covenants; foreclosures and 1031 Exchanges.

Maxwell received a B.S. in Business Administration from the University of Missouri – Columbia and a Juris Doctorate from the University of Kansas School of Law.

Maxwell will join moderator, Chris Vaeth with McCownGordon Construction; along with panelists Leonard Popplewell with Cushman & Wakefield; Tim McKee with Olathe Chamber of Commerce; and Rob Bratcher with KC Commerce Bank on the KC Market Forecast panel next Wednesday morning at 8 am at JCCC.

To learn more about the event or to register, please visit http://www.metrowiremedia.com/2022-kc-market-forecast.