Kansas City Power and Light Building
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Kansas City Power and Light Building | |
View of the South side |
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Information | |
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Location | 1330 Baltimore, Kansas City, Missouri |
Coordinates | |
Status | Completed |
Groundbreaking | 1930 |
Constructed | 1931 |
Roof | 476 feet[1] |
Floor count | 34 |
Floor area | 230,000 square feet |
Companies | |
Architect | Hoit, Price & Barnes |
Contractor | Swenson Construction Company |
Developer | Kansas City Power and Light |
Owner | Gailoyd Enterprises Corporation |
The Kansas City Power and Light Building is a Landmark building located in Downtown Kansas City, Missouri. Construction was completed in 1931, as a way to promote new jobs in Downtown, and since then the Art Deco Kansas City Power and Light Building has been a prominent part of the Kansas City skyline.
The original plans designed by Hoit, Price and Barnes included a twin building to be paired on the immediate west side of the building, but plans were abandoned after the Great Depression took a greater toll than expected. As a result, the west side of the building has no windows. After its completion in 1931, the Power and Light Building was Missouri's tallest habitable structure at 36 stories, until the completion of the One U.S. Bank Plaza building in St. Louis in 1976.
In 2002 it was added to the National Register of Historic Places.
The building is the centerpiece of the Power & Light District. The east side of the building faces this new high-end shopping center, that is slated to open for business in March of 2008. The building's legacy will continue, as a landmark for the new Power and Light District. Mixing the "old" with the "new", the Power and Light District will revitalize the downtown area and spark new interest in the Power and Light Building's history.
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Preceded by Oak Tower |
Kansas City's Tallest Building 1931—1977 476 feet |
Succeeded by 2345 Grand |
Preceded by Southwestern Bell Building |
Missouri's Tallest Building 1931—1976 476 feet |
Succeeded by One US Bank Plaza |
Preceded by Smith Tower |
Tallest building west of the Mississippi 1931—1942 145.1 m |
Succeeded by Mercantile National Bank Building |