Country Club Plaza

Country Club Plaza

Kansas City's Country Club Plaza
Location Kansas City, Missouri, United States
Coordinates 39°02′29″N 94°35′31″W / 39.041323°N 94.591813°W / 39.041323; -94.591813Coordinates: 39°02′29″N 94°35′31″W / 39.041323°N 94.591813°W / 39.041323; -94.591813
Opening date 1922 (established); 1923 (opened)
Developer J.C. Nichols
Management Macerich and Taubman Centers
Owner Macerich and Taubman Centers
Website countryclubplaza.com

The Country Club Plaza (often called The Plaza) is a privately owned American shopping center in the Country Club District of Kansas City, Missouri.

The center consists of 18 separate buildings representing 804,000 square feet of retail space and 468,000 square feet of office space.[1] The standalone buildings are built in a distinctive Seville Spain theme and are on different blocks mostly west of Main Street and mostly north of Brush Creek and blends into the Country Club neighborhood around it and the area is often simply called the "Plaza."

It was the first shopping center in the world designed to accommodate shoppers arriving by automobile.[2] The 55-acre (223,000 m²) site is about four miles (6.44 km) south of downtown, between 45th and 51st streets to the north and south and between Broadway and Madison Street to the east and west. The Kansas state line is one mile (1.6 km) to the west. Established in 1922 by J. C. Nichols and designed architecturally after Seville, Spain, the Plaza comprises high-end retail establishments, restaurants, and entertainment venues, as well as offices.[3] The neighborhoods surrounding the Plaza consist of upscale apartment buildings and mansions, especially those of the Country Club District built along Ward Parkway on the Plaza's southern and southwestern side. The Country Club Plaza is named in the Project for Public Spaces' list 60 of the World's Great Places.

History

Brush Creek on the Plaza at night

The Country Club Plaza was named for the associated Country Club District, the neighborhood developed by J.C. Nichols which surrounded the Kansas City Country Club (now Loose Park). It is situated at the northern terminus of Ward Parkway, a boulevard known for its wide, manicured median lined with fountains and statuary that traverses the Country Club District. Nichols selected the location carefully to provide residents with a direct route to the Plaza along Ward Parkway.

Nichols began acquiring the land for the Plaza in 1907, in an area of Kansas City that was then known as Brush Creek Valley. When his plans were first announced, the project was dubbed 'Nichols' Folly' because of the then seemingly undesirable location; at the time, the only developed land in the valley belonged to the Country Day School (now the Pembroke Hill School), and the rest was known for pig farming..

Nichols employed architect Edward Buehler Delk to design the new shopping district. The Plaza opened in 1923 to immediate success, and has lasted with little interruption since that year. New Urbanist land developer Andres Duany noted in Community Builder: The Life & Legacy of J.C. Nichols that the Country Club Plaza has had the longest life of any planned shopping center in the history of the world. One of its oldest retailers is the Jack Henry Clothing company, founded in 1931.

For its first four decades, the Plaza combined some higher-end shops, such as Harzfeld's, with a mix of more mid-level retailers such as Sears and Woolworth's, as well such quotidian enterprises as a bowling alley, movie theater, and a grocery store to serve the daily needs of residents of the district.. From around 1970, competition from newer suburban shopping malls led management to reposition the Plaza with luxury hotels such as the Ritz-Carlton Hotel, higher-end restaurants, and upscale retailers including Gucci, Polo Ralph Lauren, FAO Schwarz, Saks Fifth Avenue, Bally, and Swanson's. On September 12, 1977, a major flood of Brush Creek caused severe damage to the Plaza and resulted in a number of deaths.[4] The flood prompted a vast renovation and revitalization of the area that has allowed it not only to survive but to thrive.

In 1998, the J.C. Nichols Company merged with Raleigh, North Carolina-based real-estate investment trust Highwoods Properties, who now runs the Country Club Plaza.[5]

On February 19, 2013, a large explosion destroyed JJ's Restaurant on the Plaza. Believed to be caused by a gas leak, the blast left at least one person dead and sixteen injured. According to a statement from Missouri Gas Energy, a contractor doing underground work struck a gas line. Witnesses had reported a strong odor of natural gas in the area most of the afternoon. The initial explosion happened shortly after 6 p.m. and led to a four-alarm fire that caused the restaurant's complete destruction as well as damage to surrounding buildings.[6] JJ's returned in November 2014 to a new location, still in the Country Club Plaza area.[7]

In 2016 Highwoods announced plans to sell the retail complex for $660 million to a 50-50 joint venture of Taubman Centers and The Macerich Company.[8]

Layout and use

The Giralda Tower, inspired by the original at the Cathedral of Seville.

The basic design of the Country Club Plaza reflects classic European influences, especially those of Seville, Spain, yet it curiously does not include a traditional open plaza. There are more than 30 statues, murals, and tile mosaics on display in the area, as well as major architectural reproductions, such as a half-sized Giralda Tower of Seville (the tallest building in the Plaza). The Plaza also includes reproductions of San Francisco's Path of Gold streetlights. Other works of art celebrate the classics, nature, and historical American themes such as westward expansion, and a magnificent fountain featuring four horses rearing up on their hind legs, designed by Henri-Léon Gréber.

Although the Plaza was designed and built to accommodate visitors arriving by automobile, it is unlike modern shopping malls with sprawling parking lots: parking is concealed in multilevel parking garages beneath and behind the shops, or on the rooftops of buildings.

The Plaza was also the first shopping center to use the percentage lease, where rents are based on a percentage of the gross receipts of tenants. This concept was novel when Nichols invented it, but it is now a standard practice in commercial leases.

Several companies are based in the Country Club Plaza area, including American Century Investments, Russell Stover Candies, Inergy, and Gates Bar-B-Q.

Plaza lights

In 1925, a single strand of 16 colored lights was placed above a doorway in the Country Club Plaza to celebrate Christmas.[9] The number of lights increased annually, inspiring an official lighting ceremony that first took place in 1930. On Thanksgiving night, tens of thousands of people visit the Plaza for the local entertainment/performances and to watch the switch-throwing to initiate the Christmas season.[10][11] A special guest or celebrity "flips the switch" each year.[12] In its 84th year (as of 2013),[13] the Country Club Plaza's "Season of Lights" is one of the city's longest/oldest traditions.[14] The lights are turned on at 6:54pm Thanksgiving evening and shine from 5:00pm to 3:00am daily through mid-January of the following year.[15] The one- to two-hour ceremony is broadcast live on location television station KSHB.

See also

References

  1. http://www.bizjournals.com/kansascity/news/2016/01/04/country-club-plaza-kc-partners-purchase.html
  2. "'Nichols' Folly'". Retailtrafficmag.com. May 1, 1999. Retrieved December 28, 2011.
  3. "Art & History". Country Club Plaza. Retrieved December 28, 2011.
  4. "One Mans Vision". County Club Plaza official website. 2012. Retrieved 20 February 2013.
  5. Staff (undated). "Kansas City Office & Retail Space  Highwoods Properties  Kansas City, Missouri". Highwoods Properties. Retrieved July 31, 2012.
  6. "Plaza explosion leaves one dead, up to 16 injured". WAVE-TV website. 20 February 2013. Retrieved 20 February 2013.
  7. "JJ’s restaurant returns Wednesday". Retrieved April 27, 2017.
  8. "Plaza Lights Kansas City - Plaza Lights Ceremony - Plaza Lights". Kansascity.about.com. November 9, 2011. Retrieved December 28, 2011.
  9. Kaut, Steve (November 5, 2010). "Chiefs Top Running Backs Will Flip the Switch Thanksgiving Night at the Plaza Lighting Ceremony – Thomas Jones and Jamaal Charles To Share the Honor". KSHB-TV. Retrieved July 31, 2012.
  10. Staff (n.d.). "2010 Season of Lights Presented by KCP&L". Kansas City Power and Light Company. Retrieved July 31, 2012.
  11. . The Kansas City Star. Archived November 27, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.
  12. "About Us - KSHB.com". Retrieved April 27, 2017.
  13. . The Kansas City Star. Archived December 2, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.
  14. . KCTV.
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