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Wikipedia

Kansas City metropolitan area

The Kansas City metropolitan area is a bi-state metropolitan area anchored by Kansas City, Missouri. Its 14 counties straddle the border between the U.S. states of Missouri (9 counties) and Kansas (5 counties). With 8,472 square miles (21,940 km2) and a population of more than 2.2 million people, it is the second-largest metropolitan area centered in Missouri (after Greater St. Louis) and is the largest metropolitan area in Kansas, though Wichita is the largest metropolitan area centered in Kansas.[1] Alongside Kansas City, Missouri, these are the suburbs with populations above 100,000: Overland Park, Kansas; Kansas City, Kansas; Olathe, Kansas; Independence, Missouri; and Lee's Summit, Missouri.

Kansas City metropolitan area
Kansas City, MO–KS MSA
Coordinates: 39°06′N 94°35′W / 39.1°N 94.58°W / 39.1; -94.58
CountryUnited States
State(s) - Missouri
 - Kansas
Largest cityKansas City, Missouri
Cities with population over 50,000 - Overland Park, Kansas
 - Kansas City, Kansas
 - Independence, Missouri
 - Olathe, Kansas
 - Lee's Summit, Missouri
 - Shawnee, Kansas
 - Blue Springs, Missouri
 - Lenexa, Kansas
 
Area
 • Total8,472 sq mi (21,940 km2)
Highest elevation
1,1601 ft (353.51 m)
Lowest elevation
6901 ft (210.31 m)
Population
 • Total2,192,035
 • Rank30th MSA (2,192,035), 24th CSA (2,528,644) in the U.S.
 • Density260.0/sq mi (100.4/km2)
Time zoneUTC−06:00 (CST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−05:00 (CDT)

Business enterprises and employers include Cerner Corporation (the largest, with almost 10,000 local employees and about 20,000 global employees), AT&T, BNSF Railway, GEICO, Asurion, T-Mobile (formerly Sprint), Black & Veatch, AMC Theatres, Citigroup, Garmin, Hallmark Cards, Waddell & Reed, H&R Block, General Motors, Honeywell, a Ford Motor Company factory, The Kansas City Star, Bayer, Children's Mercy Hospital, Truman Medical Center-Hospital Hill, and Andrews McMeel Universal (representing Garfield, Calvin and Hobbes, and Doonesbury). Shopping centers include City Market, Crown Center, Country Club Plaza, Independence Center, Legends Outlets Kansas City, Oak Park Mall, Ward Parkway Center, and Zona Rosa.

Cultural attractions include the American Jazz Museum, the Kansas City Symphony, Kansas City Union Station, the National World War I Museum, the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts, the National Agricultural Center and Hall of Fame, Arabia Steamboat Museum, Uptown Theater, Midland Theatre, the Kansas City Zoo, Swope Park (featuring Starlight Theater), Sandstone Amphitheater, the Kansas City Renaissance Festival, Worlds of Fun, Oceans of Fun, and several casinos. Major league sports franchises include the NFL's Kansas City Chiefs, the MLB's Kansas City Royals, and the MLS's Sporting Kansas City. The Kansas Speedway is owned by NASCAR.

Historic features include these: the confluence of the eastern endpoints of the California, Santa Fe, and Oregon Trails in Independence; the Harry S. Truman Historic District; and the neighborhoods of Westport, 18th and Vine, and Pendleton Heights. Historic cultural origins include KC styles of jazz, vaudeville theater, barbecue, and steak.

Geographic overview

 
Kansas City satellite map. The larger Missouri River is zigzagging from west to east; the much smaller Kansas is approaching from the southwest and joins it at Kaw Point in Kansas City, Kansas. Downtown Kansas City, Missouri, is immediately southeast of their intersection and North Kansas City, Missouri, is to its northeast.

The larger Kansas City Metropolitan Area as seen on a map can be visualized roughly as four quadrants:

The southeast quadrant includes Kansas City, Missouri, and surrounding areas in Missouri. It includes the notorious Grandview Triangle.

The southwest quadrant includes all of Johnson County, Kansas, which includes the towns in the area known as Shawnee Mission, Kansas. Interstate 35 runs diagonally through Johnson County, Kansas, from the southwest to downtown Kansas City, Missouri.

The northwest quadrant contains Wyandotte, and Leavenworth, counties in Kansas and parts of Platte County, Missouri. Wyandotte County, Kansas (sometimes referred to as just Wyandotte), contains Kansas City, Kansas; Bonner Springs, Kansas; and Edwardsville, Kansas; it is governed by a single unified government. Often the Wyandotte government is referred to simply as "The Unified Government". Another bend in the Missouri River forms the county line between Wyandotte County, Kansas, and Platte County, Missouri, to the north and northeast.

The map's northeast quadrant is locally referred to as "north of the river" or "the Northland". It includes parts of Clay County, Missouri, including North Kansas City, Missouri, and Parkville, Missouri, just north of that. North Kansas City is bounded by a bend in the Missouri River that defines a border between Wyandotte County, Kansas, and Clay County, Missouri, running approximately North-South and a border between North Kansas City, Missouri, and Kansas City, Missouri, running approximately East-West. The river bend's sharpest part forms a peninsula containing the Kansas City Downtown Airport.

Divisions

Areas

 
The center of Kansas City is roughly contained inside the downtown loop (shaded in red).
  • Downtown Kansas City is a section of western Kansas City, Missouri, where corporate offices and much of the city's entertainment facilities are located. The area has been undergoing a massive revitalization since 2000, and increased its population by over 7,000 people between 2000 and 2005. The Power and Light District, Historic Garment District, and the T-Mobile Center are in the downtown area.
  • The Northland is a section of the metropolitan area north of the Missouri River, comprising Clay and Platte Counties in Missouri. This area includes the northern half of Kansas City, Missouri, which is referred to as Kansas City, North to distinguish it from the rest of the Northland and the city of North Kansas City. The area is also referred to as "North of the River" by local residents and by local television stations in news and traffic reports.
  • River Market is an area north of downtown, south of the Missouri River and west of Highway 9, and is home to a large farmer's market.
  • North Kansas City (NKC, also known as Northtown) is an enclaved city within Kansas City, Missouri.
  • Shawnee Mission is a district created by the United States Postal Service that encompasses 16 cities and towns in northeast Johnson County, Kansas, most of which also lie in the school district of the same name.
  • The Waldo Residential District (Waldo) is in Kansas City, Missouri, near 75th Street and Wornall Road.
  • Country Club Plaza ("the Plaza") is an upscale shopping district built by the J.C. Nichols Company in 1923, and was the first suburban shopping district in the United States.[2]
  • The Country Club District is an associated group of neighborhoods built along Ward Parkway by J.C. Nichols, which is just south of the Country Club Plaza and includes Sunset Hill, Brookside, Crestwood, and Mission Hills, Kansas.
  • 39th Street (also referred to as the Volker neighborhood or "Restaurant Row") is a small section of West 39th Street between State Line Road and the Southwest Trafficway in Kansas City, Missouri. The area has many restaurants, bars and shops, and is just across the state line from the University of Kansas Medical Center.
  • University of Kansas Hospital (KUMED) is the corporate name of the hospital on the KU Medical Center campus.
  • Benton Curve is a curve at the cross-section of Interstate 70 and Benton Boulevard in Kansas City, Missouri; the area has long been prone to traffic accidents.
  • Pendleton Heights is a neighborhood in the Historic Northeast district of Kansas City, Missouri, which is bordered by Cliff Drive to the north, Chestnut Trafficway to the east, Independence Avenue to the south, and The Paseo to the west. It is Kansas City's oldest surviving neighborhood, and has the city's largest concentration of Victorian homes.
  • The Grandview Triangle is the intersection of four major highways: Interstate 435, Interstate 470, Interstate 49, and U.S. Route 71 (Bruce R. Watkins Drive). Notorious for fatal accidents, the Triangle has undergone improvements and upgrades in recent years.
  • Emanuel Cleaver II Boulevard, named for former mayor and current Congressman Emanuel Cleaver, comprises recently renamed portions of 47th Street and Brush Creek Boulevard in Kansas City, Missouri.
  • 18th and Vine Historic District (18th and Vine) is a neighborhood on Kansas City, Missouri's north side that contains the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum and the American Jazz Museum. This area was the heart of Kansas City's black business district.
  • The Library District is a recently defined district around the new Central Library at 14 West 10th Street in Kansas City, Missouri.[3]
  • 135th Street (Overland Park, Kansas) is a shopping area featuring several indoor and outlet malls, restaurants, and two movie theaters.
  • Prariefire is a modern shopping and leisure area featuring fine restaurants such as Cocobolos and The Brass Onion, and high-end bowling venue Pinstripes. The Museum of Prariefire is its main attraction.
  • Strawberry Hill is a historical area in Kansas City, Kansas that was home to many eastern European immigrants. Later, the neighborhood became home to many Latino and Latino families.
  • Hospital Hill is an area near 23rd Street and Holmes Avenue in Kansas City, Missouri, and consists of two major hospitals (University Health and the Children's Mercy Hospital) and the University of Missouri-Kansas City's School of Medicine, School of Dentistry, School of Pharmacy, and School of Nursing.
  • Argentine is a neighborhood in Kansas City, Kansas, centered along Metropolitan and Strong avenues from 27th to 30th streets. It is one of the oldest Mexican/Latino neighborhoods in Kansas City, with Mexican immigration to that area starting in the 1800s.
  • The Crossroads Arts District is a neighborhood in the downtown area between the Central Business District and Union Station, centered around the intersection of 19th Street and Baltimore Avenue in Kansas City, Missouri. It contains dozens of art galleries, and is considered to be the center of the arts culture in the metropolitan area. Local artists sponsor exhibits in the district on the first Friday of each month.
  • Quality Hill is a residential and commercial neighborhood atop the bluff on the west side of the Central Business District of Downtown Kansas City, across the river from the Charles B. Wheeler Airport.
  • Washington-Wheatley is a historically Black neighborhood southeast of the 18th and Vine Historical District.
  • The Westside is a historically African American and Chicano/Latino neighborhood near Southwest Boulevard and Interstate 35.
  • Westport is a historic district that includes the oldest building still standing in the city and that is home to much of the metropolitan area's entertainment and nightlife.
  • Valentine is a neighborhood north of Westport that includes the historic Uptown Theater.
  • West Bottoms has many of the oldest buildings and the former location of the city's stockyards. It is now known for its arts community, the American Royal, Hy-Vee Arena, antique stores, and First Fridays events.
  • Rosedale is the southernmost district of Kansas City, Kansas, and the only part of that city whose streets are on the metropolitan grid. Home to the main hospital of the University of Kansas Health System, it was the last municipality absorbed by Kansas City, Kansas, prior to the creation of the Unified Government of Kansas City and Wyandotte County.
  • Union Hill[4]
  • Armourdale is a residential and commercial neighborhood in Kansas City, Kansas, and is one of the historically Chicano(a) neighborhoods of the Kansas City metropolitan area.
  • Sheffield is an industrial district in the Blue River valley on the city's far northeast side.
  • East Bottoms, also known as the Industrial District, is primarily known for its industrial businesses and railroad activity.
  • Brookside is a pedestrian-friendly district built in the 1920s, centered on the Brookside Shopping District at 63rd Street and Brookside Boulevard.
  • Hanover Heights is a small neighborhood in Kansas City, Kansas' Rosedale section that was once primarily noted for the antiques shops along 45th Avenue, with the neighborhood's boundaries running mainly between Rainbow Boulevard and State Line Road, running south of the KU Medical Center to the Johnson County border.
  • The Historic Northeast District (Northeast) is a working-class immigrant collection of neighborhoods between downtown Kansas City and the suburb of Independence.
  • The Truman Sports Complex, at the junction of I-70 and I-435 (east of downtown Kansas City, Missouri), is home to several professional sports attractions. It is anchored by Arrowhead Stadium, home of the Kansas City Chiefs NFL franchise; and Kauffman Stadium, home of Major League Baseball's Kansas City Royals.

Jackson County, Missouri

Downtown

Downtown Kansas City, Missouri has a population of 25,204.[5] Downtown is Kansas City's historic center, located entirely within Kansas City, Missouri, and contains the city's original town site, business districts, and residential neighborhoods. Downtown is bounded by the Missouri River on the north, the Missouri-Kansas state line on the west, 31st Street on the south and Woodland Avenue on the east. The downtown area includes the Central Business District and its buildings, which form the city's skyline. The Downtown Loop is formed by Interstates 670, 70, and 35. Within the downtown loop are many of the tall buildings and skyscrapers that make up the city's skyline. The downtown loop also has small, distinct neighborhoods such as Quality Hill, the Garment District, the Financial District, the Convention Center District, and the Power and Light District.

Other nearby neighborhoods are River Market and Columbus Park, both located between the downtown loop and the Missouri River. Between the downtown loop and the state line are the Westside neighborhood and the West Bottoms, located at the bottom of the bluff adjacent to Kaw Point. East of the loop are the 18th & Vine District, the North Bottoms, and Northeast Kansas City (the East Bottoms, Northeast, and Pendleton Heights). South of the loop is the Crossroads District, Union Hill, Crown Center, Hospital Hill, Longfellow, Wendell Phillips, and Washington Wheatley.

The Kansas City Convention Center, Municipal Auditorium, City Hall, Lyric Theater, Midland Theatre, Ilus Davis Park, and Barney Allis Plaza are within the Central Business District inside the downtown loop. The T-Mobile Center and the College Basketball Experience are within the Power & Light District, also within the downtown loop. The Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts is perched upon a high point immediately south of the downtown loop. South of the loop is the Crossroads District, Union Station, Crown Center, the National World War I Museum, Liberty Memorial, Penn Valley Park, University Health Truman Medical Center, Children's Mercy Hospital, and the 18th & Vine District. North of the loop are City Market within the River Market and Richard L. Berkeley Riverfront Park. West of the loop within the West Bottoms are Hy-Vee Arena and Hale Arena.

Midtown/Plaza

Midtown/Plaza is entirely within Kansas City, Missouri with a population of 40,355.[6] It is just south of downtown, and bounded by 31st Street on the north, the state line on the west, West Gregory Boulevard (71st Street) on the south, and Troost Avenue on the east. Midtown/Plaza, the core of the metropolitan area, has many cultural attractions, shopping and entertainment areas, large hospitals, universities, and the metro area's most densely populated neighborhoods.

Midtown/Plaza has many distinct and historic neighborhoods, including Westport, Hyde Park, and Southmoreland. Shopping is centered on the Country Club Plaza, which has luxury retailers, hotels, and restaurants. Brookside and Westport also contain smaller-scale, neighborhood-oriented, and niche-market retailers. Midtown is home to Saint Luke's Hospital of Kansas City and Research Medical Center. Cultural attractions include the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Uptown Theater, Starlight Theater, the Kansas City Zoo, Loose Park, and Swope Park. The last of these has a soccer complex that is home to the Swope Park Rangers, a USL Championship team that is the official reserve side for the area's Major League Soccer club, Sporting Kansas City. Major educational institutions include the University of Missouri–Kansas City, Rockhurst University, Kansas City Art Institute, Stowers Institute for Medical Research, Midwest Research Institute, and Penn Valley Community College.

East Side

East Side of the Metro is primarily eastern Jackson County which is an area of the Kansas City Metro that contains the far-eastern urban side of Kansas City, Missouri and the following large suburbs of Blue Springs, Independence, and Lee's Summit. The area includes western Lafayette County Missouri and the far northeast portion of Cass County Missouri. The East Side of Metro includes the Missouri suburbs of Independence, Grandview,Blue Springs, Raytown, Lees Summit, Grain Valley, Oak Grove, Sugar Creek, River Bend, Lake Lotawana, Lone Jack, Greenwood, Unity Village, Buckner, Pleasant Hill, Bates City, Odessa, and Lake Tapawingo. Arrowhead Stadium, home of the NFL's Kansas City Chiefs and Kauffman Stadium, home of the MLB's Kansas City Royals are on the eastern edge of Kansas City. The Cable Dahmer Arena home of the ECHL's Kansas City Mavericks and the MASL's Kansas City Comets is in Independence.

Johnson County, Kansas

Johnson County, Kansas contains many municipalities with a population of 609,863. It has the largest economy in the metropolitan area and is the fastest growing county by total population.[7][8][9] Municipalities include Overland Park, Olathe, Shawnee, Leawood, Lenexa, Prairie Village, Gardner, Merriam, Mission, Roeland Park, Fairway, Lake Quivira, Mission Hills, Mission Woods, Westwood, and Westwood Hills. Corporate headquarters include Garmin, Black & Veatch, and AMC Theatres, and the secondary headquarters of T-Mobile. Many local area attractions and shopping districts are in Johnson County, such as Oak Park Mall, Town Center Plaza, and Prairie Fire.

The Northland (Missouri)

The Northland is the area north of the Missouri River, bordered by the Kansas state line on the west. The southern half of Platte County, and much of Clay County make up the area. The Northland is a fast-growing, primarily suburban region of the metropolitan area, although much of it is contained within the city limits of Kansas City, Missouri. The economy of the Northland is dominated by Cerner, Kansas City International Airport, Ford Kansas City Assembly Plant, the Zona Rosa shopping community and three riverboat casinos. The metro area's largest amusement park, Worlds of Fun and Oceans of Fun, is in the Northland. Major educational institutions in the Northland include Park University, William Jewell College, and the Maple Woods campus of Metropolitan Community College. The Northland is also home to the popular recreational reservoir, Smithville Lake. Communities of the Northland outside the city limits include Parkville, Kearney, Liberty, Platte City, Gladstone, Riverside, Smithville, North Kansas City, and Weatherby Lake.

Wyandotte County, Kansas

Wyandotte County, Kansas has a population of 169,245 and contains Kansas City, Kansas, Bonner Springs, Kansas, and Edwardsville, Kansas. Kansas City, Kansas is locally called "KCK" to distinguish it from the larger Kansas City, Missouri (KCMO).[10] It contains many residential neighborhoods, the Fairfax Industrial District, and the Village West entertainment district. The General Motors Fairfax Assembly Plant is in the Fairfax Industrial District. Village West contains many area attractions. This includes many sporting venues such as Children's Mercy Park, home of the area MLS soccer team Sporting Kansas City, the Kansas Speedway, which hosts many NASCAR races, and Field of Legends, home of the independent baseball team, the Kansas City Monarchs, and the Legends shopping district. Bonner Springs is home to the Azura Amphitheater (commonly known as the Sandstone Amphitheater), the National Agricultural Center and Hall of Fame, Wyandotte County Historical Museum, and the annual Kansas City Renaissance Festival.

Cass County, Missouri

Cass County, Missouri has a population of 107,824 and contains parts of "South Kansas City". This area consists of the most southern part of Kansas City, Missouri, and the suburbs of Harrisonville, Belton, Loch Lloyd, Peculiar, and Raymore.[11]

Leavenworth County, Kansas

Leavenworth County, Kansas has a population of 81,881 and contains the cities of Leavenworth and Lansing, and the Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary.[12]

Population

Historical population
Census Pop.
1900305,427
1910422,18038.2%
1920528,83325.3%
1930665,65525.9%
1940686,6433.2%
1950814,35718.6%
19601,266,44755.5%
19701,434,79313.3%
19801,504,2034.8%
19901,636,5288.8%
20001,836,03812.2%
20102,009,3429.4%
20202,192,0359.1%
U.S. Decennial Census[13]
1790–1960[14] 1900–1990[15]
1990–2000[16]

The Kansas City metropolitan area (MO-KS) population in 2018 was 2,106,632[17] and the Kansas City CSA in 2020 was 2,528,644.[citation needed]

More than 100,000

50,000–99,999

20,000–49,999

10,000–19,999

5,000–9,999

Fewer than 5,000

Counties

The MSA covers a total area of 7,952 sq mi (20,600 km2) including 97 sq mi (250 km2) of water.

Kansas City Metropolitan Statistical Area
County State 2020 Census 2010 Census Change
Jackson MO 717,204 674,158 +6.39%
Johnson KS 609,863 544,179 +12.07%
Clay MO 253,335 221,939 +14.15%
Wyandotte KS 169,245 157,505 +7.45%
Cass MO 107,824 99,478 +8.39%
Platte MO 106,718 89,322 +19.48%
Leavenworth KS 81,881 76,277 +7.35%
Miami KS 34,191 32,787 +4.28%
Lafayette MO 32,984 33,381 −1.19%
Ray MO 23,158 23,494 −1.43%
Clinton MO 21,184 20,743 +2.13%
Bates MO 16,042 17,049 −5.91%
Linn KS 9,591 9,656 −0.67%
Caldwell MO 8,815 9,424 −6.46%
Total 2,192,035 2,009,342 +9.09%

Associated areas

Often associated with Kansas City, the cities of Lawrence, Kansas and Saint Joseph, Missouri are identified as separate Metropolitan Statistical Areas.[18]

The Kansas City-Overland Park-Kansas City MO-KS (USA) Combined Statistical Area (CSA) encompasses the Metropolitan statistical areas (MSA) of Kansas City MO-KS, the St. Joseph metropolitan area and the Lawrence, Kansas metropolitan area with the Micropolitan Statistical Areas (μSA) of Warrensburg, Missouri, Atchison, Kansas, and Ottawa, Kansas. (Warrensburg is in Johnson County, Missouri. Atchison is in Atchison County, Kansas. Ottawa is in Franklin County, Kansas.) The combined statistical area covers a total area of 9,220 sq mi (23,900 km2) including 103 sq mi (270 km2) of water.[19]

Politics

Presidential elections results in the Kansas City metropolitan area[20]
Year Democratic Republican Third parties
2020 51.2% 559,595 46.5% 508,524 2.3% 24,698
2016 45.5% 436,284 47.0% 451,531 7.5% 72,242
2012 47.8% 447,036 50.1% 468,710 2.1% 19,579
2008 52.0% 515,039 46.5% 459,981 1.5% 14,411
2004 47.9% 434,368 51.3% 464,493 0.8% 7,199
2000 48.9% 377,333 48.0% 370,249 3.1% 23,961

The Kansas City metro area is a swing metro area, going between the Republican and Democratic parties for decades.

Economy

As of 2019, Missouri accounted for 56% of employment and Kansas accounted for 44% of employment. From 2018 to 2019 Kansas added 13,000 jobs and Missouri added 6,500 jobs. Kansas side employment grew by 2.7% and Missouri side employment grew by 1.1%; job growth in Kansas was more than double that in Missouri. Professional and business employment growth was due entirely to a gain of 5,200 jobs in the Kansas portion of the metro area.[21]

In 2015, the metropolitan area accounted for 40.9% of the total GDP in the state of Kansas and 22.7% of the total GDP in the state of Missouri.[22]

Transportation

Highways

The Kansas City metropolitan area has more freeway lane miles per capita than any other large metropolitan area in the United States (over 27% more than the second-place Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex), over 50% more than the average American metro area, and nearly 75% more than the large metro area with the least: Las Vegas.[23]

Interstates

The Kansas City area is a confluence of four major U.S. interstate highways:

Other interstates that cross through the area include:

  •   I-435 – A bi-state loop through Jackson, Clay and Platte counties in Missouri and through Johnson and Wyandotte counties in Kansas. It is the second-longest single-numbered beltway in the U.S., and the fourth-longest in the world.
  •   I-470 – Connects South Kansas City with Lee's Summit and Independence.
  •   I-635 – Connects Johnson County and Kansas City, Kansas to I-29, I-70, and I-35.
  •   I-670 – A southern bypass of I-70 and the southern portion of the downtown loop. The roadway is designated on road signs as East I-70, when exiting from I-35 while traveling north.

US Highways

U.S. Highways serving the Kansas City Metro Area include these:

  •   US 24 – Running from Independence Ave. and Winner Rd., between downtown Kansas City and Independence, Missouri, it serves as a street-level connection to Independence.
  •   US 40 – U.S. 40 is one of six east-west U.S.-numbered routes that run (or ran) from coast to coast. It serves as a business loop and an alternate route for I-70.
  •   US 50 – Enters the area in southern Johnson County, follows I-435 from the west to I-470, then splits off of I-470 in Lee's Summit to continue eastward to Jefferson City and St. Louis as a regular highway. Its former route through Raytown and southeast Kansas City was renumbered as Route 350. U.S. 50 is also one of the six east-west highways that run coast-to-coast through the United States.
  •   US-56 - Enters the area concurrent with I-35 until the Shawnee Mission Parkway exit. It runs east along the Parkway into the Plaza area of Kansas City before terminating at US-71.
  •   US 69 – Connects Excelsior Springs, Missouri in the north and serves as a freeway in Johnson County Connecting I-35 to I-435 and connecting Overland Park to Louisburg and Linn Valley on the Kansas side.
  •   US 71 – In the north, concurrent with I-29 to Amazonia, Missouri, and serves as a freeway (Bruce R. Watkins Drive) south from downtown, joining with I-49 at the Grandview Triangle.
  •   US 169 – Connects Smithville, Missouri, in the north.

Kansas state highways

Kansas highways in the area include these:

  •   K-5 – A minor freeway bypassing the north of Kansas City, Kansas, connecting the GM Fairfax plant with I-635. K-5 continues as Leavenworth Road west to I-435 then on to Leavenworth, Kansas.
  •   K-7 – A freeway linking Leavenworth, Wyandotte and Johnson Counties in Kansas.
  •   K-10 – A freeway linking I-435 to De Soto and Lawrence.
  •   K-32 – A highway that links Lawrence to Wyandotte County in Kansas.

Missouri state highways

Missouri highways in the area include these:

  •   Route 7 - An important state highway serving the eastern suburbs of the metro. Primarily running north and south through Jackson and Cass Counties. Connecting the following communities: Independence, Blue Springs, Lake Lotawana, Pleasant Hill and Harrisonville. It is the commercial backbone for Blue Springs, Lake Lotawana and Pleasant Hill.
  •   Route 9 – A minor freeway northwest of North Kansas City, and serves as a commercial backbone to North Kansas City, Riverside, Platte Woods and Parkville.
  •   Route 45 – Known as Tom Watson Parkway in the Kansas City vicinity until it intersects with I-435, it is a highway that spans 42 miles from I-29/US-71 to US-59/MO-273 in Lewis & Clark Village, Missouri. Its eastern segment is also known as NW 64th Street. The highway serves as a commercial backbone of Parkville, Missouri and runs across Riss Lake. The National Golf Club of Kansas City is located on MO-45.
  •   Route 58 - A state highway serving the southern suburbs of Belton and Raymore.
  •   Route 92 – This narrow and hilly road crosses the northern part of the metro, connecting Platte City, Smithville, Kearney, and Excelsior Springs.
  •   Route 150 – A highway linking southern Lee's Summit and Grandview to the Kansas suburbs at State Line Road.
  •   Route 152 – A freeway contained entirely in Kansas City's Northland, stretching from Liberty in Clay County west until it intersects with I-435 near Parkville, Missouri.
  •   Route 210 – A minor freeway east of North Kansas City that, as a two-lane road, stretches to Richmond, Missouri.
  •   Route 291 – Formerly an eastern bypass route of U.S. 71, this minor freeway connects Harrisonville and Lee's Summit to Independence, Sugar Creek, Liberty and Kansas City North. The roadway is designated on road signs alongside I-470 north of Lee's Summit.
  •   Route 350 – This road crosses through Raytown as Blue Parkway.

Other roads

These are other notable roads:

  • 18th Street Expressway – a freeway carrying US-69 through central Wyandotte County from I-35 to I-70.
  • Ward Parkway – A scenic parkway in Kansas City, Missouri, near the Kansas-Missouri state line, where many large historic mansions and fountains are located.
  • Broadway – A street that runs from the west side of downtown Kansas City to Westport. The street has long been an entertainment center, with various bars, live jazz outlets, and restaurants along it. It also forms the eastern border of Quality Hill, one of the oldest neighborhoods in Kansas City.
  • The Paseo – Part of the city's original system of parks and boulevards developed beginning in the late 1880s, it is the longest of the original boulevards, and the only one that runs the entire length of the pre-World War II city boundary, from the Missouri River bluffs in the north to 79th Street on the south.[24]
  • Shawnee Mission Parkway – Former alignment of K-10 from 1929 to 1983; K-58 from 1956 to 1979; US-56 from 1957 to 1968; K-12 from 1983 to 1998. Serves Shawnee Mission.
  • Troost Avenue – A north-south thoroughfare 11 blocks east of Main Street, named for an early Kansas City settler and dentist, Benoist Troost. The street roughly divides the city's mostly black neighborhoods to its east from its mostly white ones to its west.
  • Swope Parkway – Running on the south side of the Brush Creek valley eastward from The Paseo, then southward from its junction with Benton Boulevard, this street is the main route from the city's midtown to its largest city park, Swope Park.
  • North Oak Trafficway – A major road in the Northland. The roadway is designated as MO-283 from MO-9 to I-29. It is a major road in the Northland and serves as the commercial backbone of Gladstone, Missouri.
  • Barry Road – Runs along the former route of Military Road, which ran from Liberty to Fort Leavenworth. It is now a major commercial street in the Northland, although it has been paralleled by MO-152 for its entire route and has been effectively replaced by it east of Indiana Avenue.
  • 87th Street Parkway – A major parkway that extends from Overland Park to De Soto. Former alignment of K-10 from 1929 to 1983.

Street numbers

The Missouri side of the metropolitan area south of the Missouri River shares a grid system with Johnson County on the Kansas side. Most east-west streets are numbered and most north-south streets named. Addresses on east-west streets are numbered from Main Street in Kansas City, Missouri, and on north-south streets from St. John Avenue (or the Missouri River, in the River Market area). The direction 'South' in street and address numbers is generally implied if 'North' is not specified, except for numbered 'avenues' in North Kansas City. In the northland, east-west streets use the prefix N.E. or N.W., depending on the side of N. Main on which they lie.

Air

The Kansas City metropolitan area is served by several airports. It is primarily served by Kansas City International Airport, 15 miles northwest of downtown Kansas City, Missouri, was built to serve as a world hub for the supersonic transport and Boeing 747. The airport's gates were positioned 100 feet (30 m) from the street; however, since the September 11, 2001 attacks, these have undergone expensive overhauls, retrofitting it to incorporate elements of conventional security systems.

The much smaller Charles B. Wheeler Downtown Airport, to the immediate north of downtown near the Missouri River, was the original headquarters of Trans World Airlines (TWA) and houses the Airline History Museum. It served as the area's major airport until 1972, when Kansas City International (then known as Mid-Continent International Airport and was home to an Overhaul Base for TWA) became the primary airport for the metropolitan area after undergoing $150 million in upgrades that were approved by voters in a 1966 bond issue. Downtown Airport is still used to this day for general aviation and airshows.

There are two general aviation airports in Johnson County, Kansas. New Century AirCenter borders southwest Olathe and northeast Gardner. The primary runway at New Century AirCenter is the second longest runway in the region next to those at Kansas City International Airport. It is 7 miles from the Logistics Park Kansas City Intermodal Facility. The other airport, Johnson County Executive Airport has one runway on 500 acres and is the fourth busiest towered airport in the state of Kansas.

Rail and bus

Kansas City is a freight and passenger rail hub centered at Union Station in Kansas City, Missouri and managed by the Kansas City Terminal Railway. Amtrak operates two daily, long-distance passenger rail services:

There are no commuter rail services.

The KC Streetcar is a 2.2-mile modern streetcar line in Downtown Kansas City. Opened to the public in May 2016, it is maintained and operated by the Kansas City Streetcar Authority, a non-profit corporation made up of private sector stakeholders and city appointees. A ballot initiative to fund construction of the $102 million line was approved by voters on December 12, 2012.[25] The system runs between River Market and Union Station, mostly along Main Street, with extensions north and south under consideration.[26]

City buses operated by the Kansas City Area Transportation Authority (KCATA) provide most public transportation in the Kansas City area. The Metro Area Express (MAX) went online as Kansas City, Missouri's first bus rapid transit line in July 2005, and operates and is marketed akin to a rail system as opposed to a local bus line; the MAX links the River Market, Downtown, Union Station, Crown Center and the Country Club Plaza.[27][28] Buses in Johnson County, Kansas, are operated by Johnson County Transit (known as "The JO").

Cultural attractions

Photo Name City Notes
 
Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art Kansas City, Missouri Founded in 1933, the Nelson-Atkins maintains wide-ranging collections of more than 35,000 works of art and welcomes 500,000 visitors a year.
 
Chicago & Alton Railroad Depot, Independence, Missouri
Chicago & Alton Railroad Depot Independence, Missouri The oldest business building in Independence, Missouri. In 1978, the hotel, which originally served the railroad, moved from the original site just south of Main Street to its present location.
 
Dillingham-Lewis House Museum, Blue Springs, Missouri
Dillingham-Lewis House Museum Blue Springs, Missouri Built in 1906, the only native limestone structure in Blue Springs. The house is named after two families.
 
Fort Osage National Historic Site Sibley, Missouri Part of the early 19th century U.S. factory trading post system for the Osage Nation.
 
Jackson County Jail and Marshal's House Independence, Missouri Former jail site, operated by the county historical society, which housed thousands of prisoners including Frank James and William Clark Quantrill.
 
Leila's Hair Museum, Independence, Missouri
Leila's Hair Museum Independence, Missouri A museum of hair art since the 19th century.
 
Lone Jack Battlefield Museum, Lone Jack, Missouri
Lone Jack Battlefield Museum Lone Jack The only Civil War Museum in Jackson County, Missouri, and one of the few battlefields where the soldiers – who perished during the battle – are still buried on the battlefield.
 
Midwest Genealogy Center Independence, Missouri The largest freestanding public genealogy research library in the USA.
 
Photo of The National Frontier Trails Museum in Independence Missouri.
National Frontier Trails Museum Independence, Missouri A museum, interpretive center, and research library about the history of principal western U.S. trails.
 
Rice-Tremonti Home, Raytown, Missouri
Rice-Tremonti Home Raytown, Missouri Home built on the Santa Fe Trail in 1844 by Archibald Rice and his family.
 
Cable Dahmer Arena Independence, Missouri A 5,800-seat multi-purpose arena that hosts the Kansas City Mavericks ice hockey team.
 
Harry S. Truman Historic District Independence and Grandview, Missouri
Associated with 33rd U.S. President Harry S. Truman, the district includes:
 
The Truman Presidential Library, in Independence.
 
The Truman home, in Independence, where Truman lived for most of his time in Missouri.
 
The Truman Farm, in Grandview, built in 1894 by Truman's maternal grandmother.
 
Truman Sports Complex Kansas City, Missouri Two major sports venues:
* Arrowhead Stadium, Kansas City Chiefs (football)
* Kauffman Stadium, Kansas City Royals (baseball)
 
Grinter Place Kansas City, Kansas A home built in 1857 by one of the earliest settlers.

Architecture

The architecture of Kansas City, Missouri, and the metropolitan area includes major works by many of the world's most distinguished architects and firms, including McKim, Mead and White; Jarvis Hunt; Wight and Wight; Graham, Anderson, Probst and White; Hoit, Price & Barnes; Frank Lloyd Wright; the Office of Mies van der Rohe; Barry Byrne; Edward Larrabee Barnes; Harry Weese; and Skidmore, Owings & Merrill.

  • The KCTV-Tower is a 1,042 feet (318 m) pyramid-shaped television and radio tower used primarily by local CBS affiliate KCTV (channel 5). It is at the corner of 31st and Main Streets, next to the studio facilities of PBS member station KCPT (which formerly housed the original studios of KCTV), and is visible from many parts of the city, especially at night due to the string of lights adorning the tower.
  • The twin red-brick towers of the American Century Investments complex are oriented north and south along Main at 45th Street, just north of the Country Club Plaza (the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art is slightly east, and the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art is east and slightly south).
  • Kansas City Community Christian Church, at 4601 Main Street, has a group of lights that shoot a beam upwards to the sky at night. Designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in the 1950s, it is slightly south of and across the street from the American Century Investment Towers (the Nelson Atkins is to the east, and the Kemper Museum is to the north and slightly east).
  • Bartle Hall has a section that somewhat resembles a north-south suspension bridge, crossing over I-670 at the southwest corner of the downtown loop. It has four towers, with metal sculptures on top of each tower.
  • The Veterans Affairs Medical Center, near the intersection of I-70, Linwood Boulevard and Van Brunt Boulevard, has a large "VA" emblem.
  • The Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts, at 16th Street and Broadway (just south of the downtown loop), with its tiered glass and steel half-domes, has a design reminiscent of the world-famous Sydney Opera House.

Colleges and universities

Top 5 largest colleges by total enrollment (within the MSA)[29]

List of institutions (including those in the CSA):

Libraries

The metro public library systems include Kansas City Public Library (Missouri), Mid-Continent Public Library, Kansas City, Kansas Public Library, and Johnson County Library. Private libraries include the Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum and the Linda Hall Library.

Media

Print

The Kansas City Star is the metropolitan area's major daily newspaper. The McClatchy Company, which owns The Star, also owns two suburban weeklies: Lee's Summit Journal and Olathe Journal.

The Kansas City Kansan serves Wyandotte County, having moved from print to an online format in 2009. Additional weekly papers in the metropolitan area include the Liberty Tribune, Sun Newspapers of Johnson County, The Examiner in Independence and eastern Jackson County, The Pitch, and the Kansas-Missouri Sentinel. The faith-based newspapers are The Metro Voice Christian Newspaper and the Jewish Chronicle. Dos Mundos is a bilingual newspaper with articles in Spanish and English, and Mi Raza magazine is the area's only weekly Hispanic publication printed in Spanish. The Kansas City Call is an African American weekly newspaper.

Broadcast

According to Arbitron, about 1.5 million people over the age of 12 live within the Kansas City DMA, making it the 30th largest market for radio and 31st for television according to Nielsen. The Kansas City television and radio markets cover 32 counties encompassing northwestern Missouri and northeast Kansas.

Television

Television stations in the Kansas City metropolitan area, with all major network affiliates represented, include:

The Kansas City television market is in very close proximity to two other media markets, St. Joseph and Topeka. As such, most of the television stations in the Kansas City area are receivable over-the-air in portions of both markets, including their principal cities; likewise, stations from Topeka are receivable as far east as Kansas City, Kansas and stations from St. Joseph are viewable as far south as Kansas City, Missouri's immediate northern suburbs.

Radio

Over 30 FM and 20 AM radio stations broadcast in the Kansas City area, with stations from Topeka, St. Joseph and Carrollton also reaching into the metropolitan area. The highest-rated radio stations, according to Arbitron are:

  • WHB (810 AM) - Sports, ESPN Radio Affiliate
  • KPRS (103.3 FM) – Urban
  • KCMO-FM (94.9) – Classic Hits
  • KQRC (98.9 FM) – Rock
  • KRBZ-FM (96.5) – Alternative
  • KMBZ (98.1 FM) – News/Talk
  • WDAF-FM (106.5) – Country, Kansas City Chiefs flagship
  • KZPT (99.7) - Adult Top 40
  • KCSP (610 AM) - Sports, Kansas City Royals flagship
  • KMXV (93.3) - Top 40
  • KFKF (94.1) - Country
  • KCFX (101.1) - Classic Rock
  • KCHZ (95.7 FM) – Top 40/Rhythmic
Public and community radio
  • KCUR (89.3 FM) – NPR affiliate
  • KANU-FM (91.5) and KTBG (90.9 FM) – both college radio stations; also NPR affiliates
  • KKFI (90.1 FM) – Locally owned not-for-profit station
  • KGSP (1480 FM) – Park University college station
Specialty radio

Hispanics, who account for 8% of the market's population, are specifically served by three AM radio stations who broadcast in Spanish:

Business interests

The Kansas City metropolitan area's largest private employer is Cerner Corporation.[32] Cerner, a global healthcare IT company which is headquartered in North Kansas City, employs nearly 10,000 people in the area with a total workforce of nearly 20,000 people including global employees. In August 2014, the company announced its acquisition of competitor Siemens Healthcare.[33] Cerner has several campuses across the area with its World Headquarters building in North Kansas City, Innovations Campus in South Kansas City, and Continuous Campus in Kansas City, Kansas.

Other major employers and business enterprises are AT&T, BNSF Railway, GEICO, Asurion, T-Mobile, Citigroup, EMBARQ, Farmers Insurance Group, Garmin, Hallmark Cards, Husqvarna, H&R Block, General Motors, Honeywell, Ford Motor Company, MillerCoors, State Street Corporation, The Kansas City Star, and Waddell & Reed, some of which are headquartered in the metropolitan area. Kansas City also has a large pharmaceutical industry, with companies such as Bayer and Aventis having a large presence.

Headquarters

These are among the largest companies and organizations, excluding educational institutions, that are headquartered in or have since relocated from the metropolitan area. Headquarters of most are located in Kansas City, Missouri.

The Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank is one of twelve such banks located in the United States.

Hospitals

Shopping centers

Natural environment

The USDA provides estimates of the number of trees by county in the Kansas City metropolitan area.[34]

  • Cass County, MO - 43,740
  • Miami County, KS - 38,700
  • Leavenworth County, KS - 332,1000
  • Jackson County, MO - 325,4000
  • Clay County, MO - 269,4000
  • Johnson County, KS - 254,9000
  • Ray County, MO - 22,710
  • Platte County, MO - 195,900
  • Wyandotte County, KS - 653,000
  • Total - 2,494,500

The five most common species in the region's urban and rural forest were American elm (28.9 percent), northern hackberry (14.0 percent), Osage-orange (7.2 percent), honeylocust (6.7 percent), and eastern redcedar (5.0 percent).

Local organizations

Notable people

Many notable people through history were born in, or moved to, what is now the Kansas City metropolitan area.

The list from Kansas City, Missouri includes these: cartoonists Walt Disney, Friz Freleng, and Ub Iwerks; musicians Count Basie, Melissa Etheridge, and Eminem; Representative Emanuel Cleaver and historical city boss Tom Pendergast; actors Ellie Kemper, Don Cheadle, and Jason Sudeikis; reporter Walter Cronkite; pilot Amelia Earhart; and writer Ernest Hemingway. The list from Kansas City, Kansas includes actors Eric Stonestreet, Scott Foley, and Tuc Watkins; Kermit the Frog puppeteer Matt Vogel; West Side Story cinematographer Daniel L. Fapp; Marvel Comics writer Jason Aaron; sculptor and pioneering black pilot Ed Dwight, Jr.; Negro leagues player Ed Dwight, Sr.; and mass murderer Richard Hickock.

The list from Independence, Missouri includes President Harry S. Truman, Guns N' Roses keyboardist Chris Pitman, eSports player Jonathan Wendel, actor Arliss Howard, Devo co-founder Bob Lewis, self-freed slave and Oregon Trail pioneer Hiram Young, Pulitzer-winning historian David McCullough, actor Ginger Rogers, rapper Tech N9ne, fantasy novelist Margaret Weis, television series creator Paul Henning, and black female Civil War soldier Cathay Williams.

From Overland Park, Kansas, this includes film directors Michael Almereyda (Hamlet) and Darren Lynn Bousman (Saw), actors Rob Riggle and Tom Kane, economist and writer Michael R. Strain, and eSports player Johnathan Wendel. From Lenexa, Kansas, this includes actors Paul Rudd and Jason Wiles, gunfighter Wild Bill Hickok, and autism researcher William Shaw. From Olathe, Kansas, this includes George Washington Carver. From Lee's Summit, this includes Bob, Cole, Jim, and John of the James–Younger Gang.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Annual Estimates of the Resident Population: April 1, 2010 to July 1, 2018". United States Census Bureau, Population Division. April 2019. Archived from the original on February 13, 2020. Retrieved May 30, 2019.
  2. ^ "Official web site of the". Country Club Plaza. from the original on October 11, 2011. Retrieved October 12, 2011.
  3. ^ Library district walking tour 2012-11-01 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved August 4, 2013
  4. ^ The Union Hill Historic District 2013-08-08 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved August 4, 2013
  5. ^ "Living in Greater Downtown". Niche.
  6. ^ "Living in Midtown / Plaza". Niche.
  7. ^ "U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts: Johnson County, Kansas". www.census.gov.
  8. ^ "Kansas City metro adds 5,900-plus people in a year. Which counties are behind that growth?". Kansas City business journal.
  9. ^ "Gross domestic product by county 2020" (PDF). Bureau of Economic Analysis.
  10. ^ "U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts: Wyandotte County, Kansas". www.census.gov.
  11. ^ "U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts: Cass County, Missouri". www.census.gov.
  12. ^ "U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts: Leavenworth County, Kansas". www.census.gov.
  13. ^ "U.S. Decennial Census". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved May 18, 2014.
  14. ^ "Historical Census Browser". University of Virginia Library. Retrieved May 18, 2014.
  15. ^ "Population of Counties by Decennial Census: 1900 to 1990". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved May 18, 2014.
  16. ^ "Census 2000 PHC-T-4. Ranking Tables for Counties: 1990 and 2000" (PDF). United States Census Bureau. Retrieved May 18, 2014.
  17. ^ "Open Data Network". Open Data Network. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  18. ^ "Bulletin" (PDF). Office of Management and Budget. Retrieved July 10, 2013 – via National Archives.
  19. ^ "Combined Statistical Areas of the U.S. and P.R." (PDF). US Census. September 2018. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  20. ^ "Our Campaigns - United States - Missouri - President". www.ourcampaigns.com. Retrieved March 11, 2022.
  21. ^ "Kansas City Area Employment – February 2020 : Mountain–Plains Information Office : U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics". www.bls.gov.
  22. ^ Lenk, Frank (October 24, 2019). "2020 Economic Forecast". Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce. Retrieved May 2, 2022.
  23. ^ "publicpurpose.com". publicpurpose.com. January 10, 2002. from the original on September 27, 2011. Retrieved October 12, 2011.
  24. ^ "With Paseo name change going up for vote, KC historian looks back at street's roots". June 8, 2019.
  25. ^ "Kansas City voters approve streetcar plan". Kansas City Business Journal. from the original on July 30, 2013. Retrieved January 26, 2013.
  26. ^ "FAQS". KC Streetcar. Retrieved June 10, 2019.
  27. ^ "Maps and Schedules". KCATA. from the original on April 20, 2010. Retrieved March 16, 2010.
  28. ^ "Light Rail and MAX". KCATA. from the original on January 15, 2010. Retrieved March 16, 2010.
  29. ^ Diaz-Camacho, Vicky (December 1, 2017). "Largest Kansas City-Area Colleges and Universities". Kansas City Business Journal. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  30. ^ "Metropolitan Community College, Kansas City". Mcckc.edu. from the original on October 11, 2011. Retrieved October 12, 2011.
  31. ^ KGKC, Wikidata Q64760086
  32. ^ "Top of the List: Private-sector employers". from the original on September 16, 2014. Retrieved September 16, 2014.
  33. ^ "Newsroom: Cerner.com". cerner.com. Archived from the original on September 16, 2014. Retrieved April 27, 2018.
  34. ^ https://www.nrs.fs.fed.us/pubs/rb/rb_nrs75.pdf[bare URL PDF]

Further reading

  • Shortridge, James R. Kansas City and How It Grew, 1822–2011 (University Press of Kansas; 2012) 248 pages; historical geography

External links

  • VisitKC.com
  • DowntownKC.org

kansas, city, metropolitan, area, kansas, city, redirects, here, city, missouri, kansas, city, missouri, city, kansas, kansas, city, kansas, other, uses, kansas, city, disambiguation, state, metropolitan, area, anchored, kansas, city, missouri, counties, strad. Kansas City redirects here For the city in Missouri see Kansas City Missouri For the city in Kansas see Kansas City Kansas For other uses see Kansas City disambiguation The Kansas City metropolitan area is a bi state metropolitan area anchored by Kansas City Missouri Its 14 counties straddle the border between the U S states of Missouri 9 counties and Kansas 5 counties With 8 472 square miles 21 940 km2 and a population of more than 2 2 million people it is the second largest metropolitan area centered in Missouri after Greater St Louis and is the largest metropolitan area in Kansas though Wichita is the largest metropolitan area centered in Kansas 1 Alongside Kansas City Missouri these are the suburbs with populations above 100 000 Overland Park Kansas Kansas City Kansas Olathe Kansas Independence Missouri and Lee s Summit Missouri Kansas City metropolitan areaMetropolitan statistical areaKansas City MO KS MSACoordinates 39 06 N 94 35 W 39 1 N 94 58 W 39 1 94 58CountryUnited StatesState s Missouri KansasLargest cityKansas City MissouriCities with population over 50 000 Overland Park Kansas Kansas City Kansas Independence Missouri Olathe Kansas Lee s Summit Missouri Shawnee Kansas Blue Springs Missouri Lenexa Kansas Area Total8 472 sq mi 21 940 km2 Highest elevation1 1601 ft 353 51 m Lowest elevation6901 ft 210 31 m Population Total2 192 035 Rank30th MSA 2 192 035 24th CSA 2 528 644 in the U S Density260 0 sq mi 100 4 km2 Time zoneUTC 06 00 CST Summer DST UTC 05 00 CDT Business enterprises and employers include Cerner Corporation the largest with almost 10 000 local employees and about 20 000 global employees AT amp T BNSF Railway GEICO Asurion T Mobile formerly Sprint Black amp Veatch AMC Theatres Citigroup Garmin Hallmark Cards Waddell amp Reed H amp R Block General Motors Honeywell a Ford Motor Company factory The Kansas City Star Bayer Children s Mercy Hospital Truman Medical Center Hospital Hill and Andrews McMeel Universal representing Garfield Calvin and Hobbes and Doonesbury Shopping centers include City Market Crown Center Country Club Plaza Independence Center Legends Outlets Kansas City Oak Park Mall Ward Parkway Center and Zona Rosa Cultural attractions include the American Jazz Museum the Kansas City Symphony Kansas City Union Station the National World War I Museum the Nelson Atkins Museum of Art the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts the National Agricultural Center and Hall of Fame Arabia Steamboat Museum Uptown Theater Midland Theatre the Kansas City Zoo Swope Park featuring Starlight Theater Sandstone Amphitheater the Kansas City Renaissance Festival Worlds of Fun Oceans of Fun and several casinos Major league sports franchises include the NFL s Kansas City Chiefs the MLB s Kansas City Royals and the MLS s Sporting Kansas City The Kansas Speedway is owned by NASCAR Historic features include these the confluence of the eastern endpoints of the California Santa Fe and Oregon Trails in Independence the Harry S Truman Historic District and the neighborhoods of Westport 18th and Vine and Pendleton Heights Historic cultural origins include KC styles of jazz vaudeville theater barbecue and steak Contents 1 Geographic overview 2 Divisions 2 1 Areas 2 2 Jackson County Missouri 2 2 1 Downtown 2 2 2 Midtown Plaza 2 2 3 East Side 2 3 Johnson County Kansas 2 4 The Northland Missouri 2 5 Wyandotte County Kansas 2 6 Cass County Missouri 2 7 Leavenworth County Kansas 3 Population 3 1 More than 100 000 3 2 50 000 99 999 3 3 20 000 49 999 3 4 10 000 19 999 3 5 5 000 9 999 3 6 Fewer than 5 000 3 7 Counties 3 8 Associated areas 4 Politics 5 Economy 6 Transportation 6 1 Highways 6 1 1 Interstates 6 1 2 US Highways 6 1 3 Kansas state highways 6 1 4 Missouri state highways 6 1 5 Other roads 6 1 6 Street numbers 6 2 Air 6 3 Rail and bus 7 Cultural attractions 8 Architecture 9 Colleges and universities 10 Libraries 11 Media 11 1 Print 11 2 Broadcast 11 2 1 Television 11 2 2 Radio 11 2 2 1 Public and community radio 11 2 2 2 Specialty radio 12 Business interests 12 1 Headquarters 12 2 Hospitals 12 3 Shopping centers 13 Natural environment 14 Local organizations 15 Notable people 16 See also 17 References 18 Further reading 19 External linksGeographic overview EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Kansas City satellite map The larger Missouri River is zigzagging from west to east the much smaller Kansas is approaching from the southwest and joins it at Kaw Point in Kansas City Kansas Downtown Kansas City Missouri is immediately southeast of their intersection and North Kansas City Missouri is to its northeast The larger Kansas City Metropolitan Area as seen on a map can be visualized roughly as four quadrants The southeast quadrant includes Kansas City Missouri and surrounding areas in Missouri It includes the notorious Grandview Triangle The southwest quadrant includes all of Johnson County Kansas which includes the towns in the area known as Shawnee Mission Kansas Interstate 35 runs diagonally through Johnson County Kansas from the southwest to downtown Kansas City Missouri The northwest quadrant contains Wyandotte and Leavenworth counties in Kansas and parts of Platte County Missouri Wyandotte County Kansas sometimes referred to as just Wyandotte contains Kansas City Kansas Bonner Springs Kansas and Edwardsville Kansas it is governed by a single unified government Often the Wyandotte government is referred to simply as The Unified Government Another bend in the Missouri River forms the county line between Wyandotte County Kansas and Platte County Missouri to the north and northeast The map s northeast quadrant is locally referred to as north of the river or the Northland It includes parts of Clay County Missouri including North Kansas City Missouri and Parkville Missouri just north of that North Kansas City is bounded by a bend in the Missouri River that defines a border between Wyandotte County Kansas and Clay County Missouri running approximately North South and a border between North Kansas City Missouri and Kansas City Missouri running approximately East West The river bend s sharpest part forms a peninsula containing the Kansas City Downtown Airport Divisions EditSee also Kansas City Missouri at Wikivoyage Areas Edit Main article Neighborhoods of Kansas City Missouri The center of Kansas City is roughly contained inside the downtown loop shaded in red Downtown Kansas City is a section of western Kansas City Missouri where corporate offices and much of the city s entertainment facilities are located The area has been undergoing a massive revitalization since 2000 and increased its population by over 7 000 people between 2000 and 2005 The Power and Light District Historic Garment District and the T Mobile Center are in the downtown area The Northland is a section of the metropolitan area north of the Missouri River comprising Clay and Platte Counties in Missouri This area includes the northern half of Kansas City Missouri which is referred to as Kansas City North to distinguish it from the rest of the Northland and the city of North Kansas City The area is also referred to as North of the River by local residents and by local television stations in news and traffic reports River Market is an area north of downtown south of the Missouri River and west of Highway 9 and is home to a large farmer s market North Kansas City NKC also known as Northtown is an enclaved city within Kansas City Missouri Shawnee Mission is a district created by the United States Postal Service that encompasses 16 cities and towns in northeast Johnson County Kansas most of which also lie in the school district of the same name The Waldo Residential District Waldo is in Kansas City Missouri near 75th Street and Wornall Road Country Club Plaza the Plaza is an upscale shopping district built by the J C Nichols Company in 1923 and was the first suburban shopping district in the United States 2 The Country Club District is an associated group of neighborhoods built along Ward Parkway by J C Nichols which is just south of the Country Club Plaza and includes Sunset Hill Brookside Crestwood and Mission Hills Kansas 39th Street also referred to as the Volker neighborhood or Restaurant Row is a small section of West 39th Street between State Line Road and the Southwest Trafficway in Kansas City Missouri The area has many restaurants bars and shops and is just across the state line from the University of Kansas Medical Center University of Kansas Hospital KUMED is the corporate name of the hospital on the KU Medical Center campus Benton Curve is a curve at the cross section of Interstate 70 and Benton Boulevard in Kansas City Missouri the area has long been prone to traffic accidents Pendleton Heights is a neighborhood in the Historic Northeast district of Kansas City Missouri which is bordered by Cliff Drive to the north Chestnut Trafficway to the east Independence Avenue to the south and The Paseo to the west It is Kansas City s oldest surviving neighborhood and has the city s largest concentration of Victorian homes The Grandview Triangle is the intersection of four major highways Interstate 435 Interstate 470 Interstate 49 and U S Route 71 Bruce R Watkins Drive Notorious for fatal accidents the Triangle has undergone improvements and upgrades in recent years Emanuel Cleaver II Boulevard named for former mayor and current Congressman Emanuel Cleaver comprises recently renamed portions of 47th Street and Brush Creek Boulevard in Kansas City Missouri 18th and Vine Historic District 18th and Vine is a neighborhood on Kansas City Missouri s north side that contains the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum and the American Jazz Museum This area was the heart of Kansas City s black business district The Library District is a recently defined district around the new Central Library at 14 West 10th Street in Kansas City Missouri 3 135th Street Overland Park Kansas is a shopping area featuring several indoor and outlet malls restaurants and two movie theaters Prariefire is a modern shopping and leisure area featuring fine restaurants such as Cocobolos and The Brass Onion and high end bowling venue Pinstripes The Museum of Prariefire is its main attraction Strawberry Hill is a historical area in Kansas City Kansas that was home to many eastern European immigrants Later the neighborhood became home to many Latino and Latino families Hospital Hill is an area near 23rd Street and Holmes Avenue in Kansas City Missouri and consists of two major hospitals University Health and the Children s Mercy Hospital and the University of Missouri Kansas City s School of Medicine School of Dentistry School of Pharmacy and School of Nursing Argentine is a neighborhood in Kansas City Kansas centered along Metropolitan and Strong avenues from 27th to 30th streets It is one of the oldest Mexican Latino neighborhoods in Kansas City with Mexican immigration to that area starting in the 1800s The Crossroads Arts District is a neighborhood in the downtown area between the Central Business District and Union Station centered around the intersection of 19th Street and Baltimore Avenue in Kansas City Missouri It contains dozens of art galleries and is considered to be the center of the arts culture in the metropolitan area Local artists sponsor exhibits in the district on the first Friday of each month Quality Hill is a residential and commercial neighborhood atop the bluff on the west side of the Central Business District of Downtown Kansas City across the river from the Charles B Wheeler Airport Washington Wheatley is a historically Black neighborhood southeast of the 18th and Vine Historical District The Westside is a historically African American and Chicano Latino neighborhood near Southwest Boulevard and Interstate 35 Westport is a historic district that includes the oldest building still standing in the city and that is home to much of the metropolitan area s entertainment and nightlife Valentine is a neighborhood north of Westport that includes the historic Uptown Theater West Bottoms has many of the oldest buildings and the former location of the city s stockyards It is now known for its arts community the American Royal Hy Vee Arena antique stores and First Fridays events Rosedale is the southernmost district of Kansas City Kansas and the only part of that city whose streets are on the metropolitan grid Home to the main hospital of the University of Kansas Health System it was the last municipality absorbed by Kansas City Kansas prior to the creation of the Unified Government of Kansas City and Wyandotte County Union Hill 4 Armourdale is a residential and commercial neighborhood in Kansas City Kansas and is one of the historically Chicano a neighborhoods of the Kansas City metropolitan area Sheffield is an industrial district in the Blue River valley on the city s far northeast side East Bottoms also known as the Industrial District is primarily known for its industrial businesses and railroad activity Brookside is a pedestrian friendly district built in the 1920s centered on the Brookside Shopping District at 63rd Street and Brookside Boulevard Hanover Heights is a small neighborhood in Kansas City Kansas Rosedale section that was once primarily noted for the antiques shops along 45th Avenue with the neighborhood s boundaries running mainly between Rainbow Boulevard and State Line Road running south of the KU Medical Center to the Johnson County border The Historic Northeast District Northeast is a working class immigrant collection of neighborhoods between downtown Kansas City and the suburb of Independence The Truman Sports Complex at the junction of I 70 and I 435 east of downtown Kansas City Missouri is home to several professional sports attractions It is anchored by Arrowhead Stadium home of the Kansas City Chiefs NFL franchise and Kauffman Stadium home of Major League Baseball s Kansas City Royals Jackson County Missouri Edit Downtown Edit Main article Downtown Kansas City Downtown Kansas City Missouri has a population of 25 204 5 Downtown is Kansas City s historic center located entirely within Kansas City Missouri and contains the city s original town site business districts and residential neighborhoods Downtown is bounded by the Missouri River on the north the Missouri Kansas state line on the west 31st Street on the south and Woodland Avenue on the east The downtown area includes the Central Business District and its buildings which form the city s skyline The Downtown Loop is formed by Interstates 670 70 and 35 Within the downtown loop are many of the tall buildings and skyscrapers that make up the city s skyline The downtown loop also has small distinct neighborhoods such as Quality Hill the Garment District the Financial District the Convention Center District and the Power and Light District Other nearby neighborhoods are River Market and Columbus Park both located between the downtown loop and the Missouri River Between the downtown loop and the state line are the Westside neighborhood and the West Bottoms located at the bottom of the bluff adjacent to Kaw Point East of the loop are the 18th amp Vine District the North Bottoms and Northeast Kansas City the East Bottoms Northeast and Pendleton Heights South of the loop is the Crossroads District Union Hill Crown Center Hospital Hill Longfellow Wendell Phillips and Washington Wheatley The Kansas City Convention Center Municipal Auditorium City Hall Lyric Theater Midland Theatre Ilus Davis Park and Barney Allis Plaza are within the Central Business District inside the downtown loop The T Mobile Center and the College Basketball Experience are within the Power amp Light District also within the downtown loop The Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts is perched upon a high point immediately south of the downtown loop South of the loop is the Crossroads District Union Station Crown Center the National World War I Museum Liberty Memorial Penn Valley Park University Health Truman Medical Center Children s Mercy Hospital and the 18th amp Vine District North of the loop are City Market within the River Market and Richard L Berkeley Riverfront Park West of the loop within the West Bottoms are Hy Vee Arena and Hale Arena Midtown Plaza Edit Midtown Plaza is entirely within Kansas City Missouri with a population of 40 355 6 It is just south of downtown and bounded by 31st Street on the north the state line on the west West Gregory Boulevard 71st Street on the south and Troost Avenue on the east Midtown Plaza the core of the metropolitan area has many cultural attractions shopping and entertainment areas large hospitals universities and the metro area s most densely populated neighborhoods Midtown Plaza has many distinct and historic neighborhoods including Westport Hyde Park and Southmoreland Shopping is centered on the Country Club Plaza which has luxury retailers hotels and restaurants Brookside and Westport also contain smaller scale neighborhood oriented and niche market retailers Midtown is home to Saint Luke s Hospital of Kansas City and Research Medical Center Cultural attractions include the Nelson Atkins Museum of Art Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art Uptown Theater Starlight Theater the Kansas City Zoo Loose Park and Swope Park The last of these has a soccer complex that is home to the Swope Park Rangers a USL Championship team that is the official reserve side for the area s Major League Soccer club Sporting Kansas City Major educational institutions include the University of Missouri Kansas City Rockhurst University Kansas City Art Institute Stowers Institute for Medical Research Midwest Research Institute and Penn Valley Community College East Side Edit East Side of the Metro is primarily eastern Jackson County which is an area of the Kansas City Metro that contains the far eastern urban side of Kansas City Missouri and the following large suburbs of Blue Springs Independence and Lee s Summit The area includes western Lafayette County Missouri and the far northeast portion of Cass County Missouri The East Side of Metro includes the Missouri suburbs of Independence Grandview Blue Springs Raytown Lees Summit Grain Valley Oak Grove Sugar Creek River Bend Lake Lotawana Lone Jack Greenwood Unity Village Buckner Pleasant Hill Bates City Odessa and Lake Tapawingo Arrowhead Stadium home of the NFL s Kansas City Chiefs and Kauffman Stadium home of the MLB s Kansas City Royals are on the eastern edge of Kansas City The Cable Dahmer Arena home of the ECHL s Kansas City Mavericks and the MASL s Kansas City Comets is in Independence Johnson County Kansas Edit Johnson County Kansas contains many municipalities with a population of 609 863 It has the largest economy in the metropolitan area and is the fastest growing county by total population 7 8 9 Municipalities include Overland Park Olathe Shawnee Leawood Lenexa Prairie Village Gardner Merriam Mission Roeland Park Fairway Lake Quivira Mission Hills Mission Woods Westwood and Westwood Hills Corporate headquarters include Garmin Black amp Veatch and AMC Theatres and the secondary headquarters of T Mobile Many local area attractions and shopping districts are in Johnson County such as Oak Park Mall Town Center Plaza and Prairie Fire The Northland Missouri Edit The Northland is the area north of the Missouri River bordered by the Kansas state line on the west The southern half of Platte County and much of Clay County make up the area The Northland is a fast growing primarily suburban region of the metropolitan area although much of it is contained within the city limits of Kansas City Missouri The economy of the Northland is dominated by Cerner Kansas City International Airport Ford Kansas City Assembly Plant the Zona Rosa shopping community and three riverboat casinos The metro area s largest amusement park Worlds of Fun and Oceans of Fun is in the Northland Major educational institutions in the Northland include Park University William Jewell College and the Maple Woods campus of Metropolitan Community College The Northland is also home to the popular recreational reservoir Smithville Lake Communities of the Northland outside the city limits include Parkville Kearney Liberty Platte City Gladstone Riverside Smithville North Kansas City and Weatherby Lake Wyandotte County Kansas Edit Wyandotte County Kansas has a population of 169 245 and contains Kansas City Kansas Bonner Springs Kansas and Edwardsville Kansas Kansas City Kansas is locally called KCK to distinguish it from the larger Kansas City Missouri KCMO 10 It contains many residential neighborhoods the Fairfax Industrial District and the Village West entertainment district The General Motors Fairfax Assembly Plant is in the Fairfax Industrial District Village West contains many area attractions This includes many sporting venues such as Children s Mercy Park home of the area MLS soccer team Sporting Kansas City the Kansas Speedway which hosts many NASCAR races and Field of Legends home of the independent baseball team the Kansas City Monarchs and the Legends shopping district Bonner Springs is home to the Azura Amphitheater commonly known as the Sandstone Amphitheater the National Agricultural Center and Hall of Fame Wyandotte County Historical Museum and the annual Kansas City Renaissance Festival Cass County Missouri Edit Cass County Missouri has a population of 107 824 and contains parts of South Kansas City This area consists of the most southern part of Kansas City Missouri and the suburbs of Harrisonville Belton Loch Lloyd Peculiar and Raymore 11 Leavenworth County Kansas Edit Leavenworth County Kansas has a population of 81 881 and contains the cities of Leavenworth and Lansing and the Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary 12 Population EditHistorical populationCensus Pop 1900305 427 1910422 18038 2 1920528 83325 3 1930665 65525 9 1940686 6433 2 1950814 35718 6 19601 266 44755 5 19701 434 79313 3 19801 504 2034 8 19901 636 5288 8 20001 836 03812 2 20102 009 3429 4 20202 192 0359 1 U S Decennial Census 13 1790 1960 14 1900 1990 15 1990 2000 16 The Kansas City metropolitan area MO KS population in 2018 was 2 106 632 17 and the Kansas City CSA in 2020 was 2 528 644 citation needed More than 100 000 Edit Kansas City Missouri Pop 508 090 Overland Park Kansas Pop 197 238 Kansas City Kansas Pop 156 607 Olathe Kansas Pop 141 290 Independence Missouri Pop 123 011 Lee s Summit Missouri Pop 101 108 50 000 99 999 Edit Shawnee Kansas Pop 67 311 Blue Springs Missouri Pop 58 063 Lenexa Kansas Pop 57 434 20 000 49 999 Edit Leavenworth Kansas Pop 37 351 Leawood Kansas Pop 33 902 Liberty Missouri Pop 30 167 Raytown Missouri Pop 30 012 Gladstone Missouri Pop 27 063 Grandview Missouri Pop 26 209 Belton Missouri Pop 23 953 Gardner Kansas Pop 23 287 Prairie Village Kansas Pop 22 957 Raymore Missouri Pop 22 941 10 000 19 999 Edit Grain Valley Missouri Pop 15 627 Ottawa Kansas Pop 12 387 Lansing Kansas Pop 11 767 Excelsior Springs Missouri Pop 11 486 Merriam Kansas Pop 11 288 Smithville Missouri Pop 10 406 5 000 9 999 Edit Harrisonville Missouri Pop 9 986 Cameron Missouri partial Pop 9 933 Mission Kansas Pop 9 491 Kearney Missouri Pop 9 423 Pleasant Hill Missouri Pop 8 289 Oak Grove Missouri Pop 7 937 Bonner Springs Kansas Pop 7 606 Roeland Park Kansas Pop 6 827 Parkville Missouri Pop 6 296 De Soto Kansas Pop 6 074 Richmond Missouri Pop 6 013 Spring Hill Kansas Pop 5 981 Greenwood Missouri Pop 5 569 Paola Kansas Pop 5 527 Basehor Kansas Pop 5 403 Tonganoxie Kansas Pop 5 248 Odessa Missouri Pop 5 178 Fewer than 5 000 Edit Peculiar Missouri Pop 4 885 Platte City Missouri Pop 4 833 Higginsville Missouri Pop 4 662 Lexington Missouri Pop 4 598 Edwardsville Kansas Pop 4 390 North Kansas City Missouri Pop 4 354 Osawatomie Kansas Pop 4 297 Louisburg Kansas Pop 4 276 Fairway Kansas Pop 3 970 Mission Hills Kansas Pop 3 601 Sugar Creek Missouri Pop 3 320 Riverside Missouri Pop 3 150 Buckner Missouri Pop 3 067 Pleasant Valley Missouri Pop 3 056 Lawson Missouri Pop 2 409 Plattsburg Missouri Pop 2 291 Lake Lotawana Missouri Pop 2 018 Weatherby Lake Missouri Pop 1 848 Wellsville Kansas Pop 1 818 Edgerton Kansas Pop 1 736 Westwood Kansas Pop 1 719 Hamilton Missouri Pop 1 690 Garden City Missouri Pop 1 625 Gower Missouri partial Pop 1 526 Claycomo Missouri Pop 1 468 Lone Jack Missouri Pop 1 124 Drexel Missouri Pop 999 Orrick Missouri Pop 753 Braymer Missouri Pop 737 Lake Tapawingo Missouri Pop 723 Glenaire Missouri Pop 578 Hardin Missouri Pop 571 Polo Missouri Pop 509 Dearborn Missouri partial Pop 496 Avondale Missouri Pop 440 Osborn Missouri partial Pop 423 Sibley Missouri Pop 356 Kingston Missouri Pop 290 Henrietta Missouri Pop 278 Breckenridge Missouri Pop 258 Camden Missouri Pop 175 Cowgill Missouri Pop 168 Oaks Missouri Pop 129 Fleming Missouri Pop 114 Unity Village Missouri Pop 84 Levasy Missouri Pop 83 Randolph Missouri Pop 54 River Bend Missouri Pop 10 Counties Edit The MSA covers a total area of 7 952 sq mi 20 600 km2 including 97 sq mi 250 km2 of water Kansas City Metropolitan Statistical Area County State 2020 Census 2010 Census ChangeJackson MO 717 204 674 158 6 39 Johnson KS 609 863 544 179 12 07 Clay MO 253 335 221 939 14 15 Wyandotte KS 169 245 157 505 7 45 Cass MO 107 824 99 478 8 39 Platte MO 106 718 89 322 19 48 Leavenworth KS 81 881 76 277 7 35 Miami KS 34 191 32 787 4 28 Lafayette MO 32 984 33 381 1 19 Ray MO 23 158 23 494 1 43 Clinton MO 21 184 20 743 2 13 Bates MO 16 042 17 049 5 91 Linn KS 9 591 9 656 0 67 Caldwell MO 8 815 9 424 6 46 Total 2 192 035 2 009 342 9 09 Associated areas Edit Often associated with Kansas City the cities of Lawrence Kansas and Saint Joseph Missouri are identified as separate Metropolitan Statistical Areas 18 The Kansas City Overland Park Kansas City MO KS USA Combined Statistical Area CSA encompasses the Metropolitan statistical areas MSA of Kansas City MO KS the St Joseph metropolitan area and the Lawrence Kansas metropolitan area with the Micropolitan Statistical Areas mSA of Warrensburg Missouri Atchison Kansas and Ottawa Kansas Warrensburg is in Johnson County Missouri Atchison is in Atchison County Kansas Ottawa is in Franklin County Kansas The combined statistical area covers a total area of 9 220 sq mi 23 900 km2 including 103 sq mi 270 km2 of water 19 Politics EditPresidential elections results in the Kansas City metropolitan area 20 Year Democratic Republican Third parties2020 51 2 559 595 46 5 508 524 2 3 24 6982016 45 5 436 284 47 0 451 531 7 5 72 2422012 47 8 447 036 50 1 468 710 2 1 19 5792008 52 0 515 039 46 5 459 981 1 5 14 4112004 47 9 434 368 51 3 464 493 0 8 7 1992000 48 9 377 333 48 0 370 249 3 1 23 961The Kansas City metro area is a swing metro area going between the Republican and Democratic parties for decades Economy EditAs of 2019 update Missouri accounted for 56 of employment and Kansas accounted for 44 of employment From 2018 to 2019 Kansas added 13 000 jobs and Missouri added 6 500 jobs Kansas side employment grew by 2 7 and Missouri side employment grew by 1 1 job growth in Kansas was more than double that in Missouri Professional and business employment growth was due entirely to a gain of 5 200 jobs in the Kansas portion of the metro area 21 In 2015 the metropolitan area accounted for 40 9 of the total GDP in the state of Kansas and 22 7 of the total GDP in the state of Missouri 22 Transportation EditHighways Edit The Kansas City metropolitan area has more freeway lane miles per capita than any other large metropolitan area in the United States over 27 more than the second place Dallas Fort Worth Metroplex over 50 more than the average American metro area and nearly 75 more than the large metro area with the least Las Vegas 23 Interstates Edit The Kansas City area is a confluence of four major U S interstate highways I 29 North to St Joseph Missouri I 35 North to Des Moines Iowa and south to Wichita Kansas I 49 South to Joplin I 70 East to St Louis and west to Topeka KansasOther interstates that cross through the area include I 435 A bi state loop through Jackson Clay and Platte counties in Missouri and through Johnson and Wyandotte counties in Kansas It is the second longest single numbered beltway in the U S and the fourth longest in the world I 470 Connects South Kansas City with Lee s Summit and Independence I 635 Connects Johnson County and Kansas City Kansas to I 29 I 70 and I 35 I 670 A southern bypass of I 70 and the southern portion of the downtown loop The roadway is designated on road signs as East I 70 when exiting from I 35 while traveling north US Highways Edit U S Highways serving the Kansas City Metro Area include these US 24 Running from Independence Ave and Winner Rd between downtown Kansas City and Independence Missouri it serves as a street level connection to Independence US 40 U S 40 is one of six east west U S numbered routes that run or ran from coast to coast It serves as a business loop and an alternate route for I 70 US 50 Enters the area in southern Johnson County follows I 435 from the west to I 470 then splits off of I 470 in Lee s Summit to continue eastward to Jefferson City and St Louis as a regular highway Its former route through Raytown and southeast Kansas City was renumbered as Route 350 U S 50 is also one of the six east west highways that run coast to coast through the United States US 56 Enters the area concurrent with I 35 until the Shawnee Mission Parkway exit It runs east along the Parkway into the Plaza area of Kansas City before terminating at US 71 US 69 Connects Excelsior Springs Missouri in the north and serves as a freeway in Johnson County Connecting I 35 to I 435 and connecting Overland Park to Louisburg and Linn Valley on the Kansas side US 71 In the north concurrent with I 29 to Amazonia Missouri and serves as a freeway Bruce R Watkins Drive south from downtown joining with I 49 at the Grandview Triangle US 169 Connects Smithville Missouri in the north Kansas state highways Edit Kansas highways in the area include these K 5 A minor freeway bypassing the north of Kansas City Kansas connecting the GM Fairfax plant with I 635 K 5 continues as Leavenworth Road west to I 435 then on to Leavenworth Kansas K 7 A freeway linking Leavenworth Wyandotte and Johnson Counties in Kansas K 10 A freeway linking I 435 to De Soto and Lawrence K 32 A highway that links Lawrence to Wyandotte County in Kansas Missouri state highways Edit Missouri highways in the area include these Route 7 An important state highway serving the eastern suburbs of the metro Primarily running north and south through Jackson and Cass Counties Connecting the following communities Independence Blue Springs Lake Lotawana Pleasant Hill and Harrisonville It is the commercial backbone for Blue Springs Lake Lotawana and Pleasant Hill Route 9 A minor freeway northwest of North Kansas City and serves as a commercial backbone to North Kansas City Riverside Platte Woods and Parkville Route 45 Known as Tom Watson Parkway in the Kansas City vicinity until it intersects with I 435 it is a highway that spans 42 miles from I 29 US 71 to US 59 MO 273 in Lewis amp Clark Village Missouri Its eastern segment is also known as NW 64th Street The highway serves as a commercial backbone of Parkville Missouri and runs across Riss Lake The National Golf Club of Kansas City is located on MO 45 Route 58 A state highway serving the southern suburbs of Belton and Raymore Route 92 This narrow and hilly road crosses the northern part of the metro connecting Platte City Smithville Kearney and Excelsior Springs Route 150 A highway linking southern Lee s Summit and Grandview to the Kansas suburbs at State Line Road Route 152 A freeway contained entirely in Kansas City s Northland stretching from Liberty in Clay County west until it intersects with I 435 near Parkville Missouri Route 210 A minor freeway east of North Kansas City that as a two lane road stretches to Richmond Missouri Route 291 Formerly an eastern bypass route of U S 71 this minor freeway connects Harrisonville and Lee s Summit to Independence Sugar Creek Liberty and Kansas City North The roadway is designated on road signs alongside I 470 north of Lee s Summit Route 350 This road crosses through Raytown as Blue Parkway Other roads Edit These are other notable roads 18th Street Expressway a freeway carrying US 69 through central Wyandotte County from I 35 to I 70 Ward Parkway A scenic parkway in Kansas City Missouri near the Kansas Missouri state line where many large historic mansions and fountains are located Broadway A street that runs from the west side of downtown Kansas City to Westport The street has long been an entertainment center with various bars live jazz outlets and restaurants along it It also forms the eastern border of Quality Hill one of the oldest neighborhoods in Kansas City The Paseo Part of the city s original system of parks and boulevards developed beginning in the late 1880s it is the longest of the original boulevards and the only one that runs the entire length of the pre World War II city boundary from the Missouri River bluffs in the north to 79th Street on the south 24 Shawnee Mission Parkway Former alignment of K 10 from 1929 to 1983 K 58 from 1956 to 1979 US 56 from 1957 to 1968 K 12 from 1983 to 1998 Serves Shawnee Mission Troost Avenue A north south thoroughfare 11 blocks east of Main Street named for an early Kansas City settler and dentist Benoist Troost The street roughly divides the city s mostly black neighborhoods to its east from its mostly white ones to its west Swope Parkway Running on the south side of the Brush Creek valley eastward from The Paseo then southward from its junction with Benton Boulevard this street is the main route from the city s midtown to its largest city park Swope Park North Oak Trafficway A major road in the Northland The roadway is designated as MO 283 from MO 9 to I 29 It is a major road in the Northland and serves as the commercial backbone of Gladstone Missouri Barry Road Runs along the former route of Military Road which ran from Liberty to Fort Leavenworth It is now a major commercial street in the Northland although it has been paralleled by MO 152 for its entire route and has been effectively replaced by it east of Indiana Avenue 87th Street Parkway A major parkway that extends from Overland Park to De Soto Former alignment of K 10 from 1929 to 1983 Street numbers Edit The Missouri side of the metropolitan area south of the Missouri River shares a grid system with Johnson County on the Kansas side Most east west streets are numbered and most north south streets named Addresses on east west streets are numbered from Main Street in Kansas City Missouri and on north south streets from St John Avenue or the Missouri River in the River Market area The direction South in street and address numbers is generally implied if North is not specified except for numbered avenues in North Kansas City In the northland east west streets use the prefix N E or N W depending on the side of N Main on which they lie Air Edit The Kansas City metropolitan area is served by several airports It is primarily served by Kansas City International Airport 15 miles northwest of downtown Kansas City Missouri was built to serve as a world hub for the supersonic transport and Boeing 747 The airport s gates were positioned 100 feet 30 m from the street however since the September 11 2001 attacks these have undergone expensive overhauls retrofitting it to incorporate elements of conventional security systems The much smaller Charles B Wheeler Downtown Airport to the immediate north of downtown near the Missouri River was the original headquarters of Trans World Airlines TWA and houses the Airline History Museum It served as the area s major airport until 1972 when Kansas City International then known as Mid Continent International Airport and was home to an Overhaul Base for TWA became the primary airport for the metropolitan area after undergoing 150 million in upgrades that were approved by voters in a 1966 bond issue Downtown Airport is still used to this day for general aviation and airshows There are two general aviation airports in Johnson County Kansas New Century AirCenter borders southwest Olathe and northeast Gardner The primary runway at New Century AirCenter is the second longest runway in the region next to those at Kansas City International Airport It is 7 miles from the Logistics Park Kansas City Intermodal Facility The other airport Johnson County Executive Airport has one runway on 500 acres and is the fourth busiest towered airport in the state of Kansas Rail and bus Edit Kansas City is a freight and passenger rail hub centered at Union Station in Kansas City Missouri and managed by the Kansas City Terminal Railway Amtrak operates two daily long distance passenger rail services Missouri River Runner twice daily from Kansas City to Saint Louis connecting to Chicago via the Lincoln Service Southwest Chief from Chicago to Los Angeles There are no commuter rail services The KC Streetcar is a 2 2 mile modern streetcar line in Downtown Kansas City Opened to the public in May 2016 it is maintained and operated by the Kansas City Streetcar Authority a non profit corporation made up of private sector stakeholders and city appointees A ballot initiative to fund construction of the 102 million line was approved by voters on December 12 2012 25 The system runs between River Market and Union Station mostly along Main Street with extensions north and south under consideration 26 City buses operated by the Kansas City Area Transportation Authority KCATA provide most public transportation in the Kansas City area The Metro Area Express MAX went online as Kansas City Missouri s first bus rapid transit line in July 2005 and operates and is marketed akin to a rail system as opposed to a local bus line the MAX links the River Market Downtown Union Station Crown Center and the Country Club Plaza 27 28 Buses in Johnson County Kansas are operated by Johnson County Transit known as The JO Cultural attractions EditPhoto Name City Notes Nelson Atkins Museum of Art Kansas City Missouri Founded in 1933 the Nelson Atkins maintains wide ranging collections of more than 35 000 works of art and welcomes 500 000 visitors a year Chicago amp Alton Railroad Depot Independence Missouri Chicago amp Alton Railroad Depot Independence Missouri The oldest business building in Independence Missouri In 1978 the hotel which originally served the railroad moved from the original site just south of Main Street to its present location Dillingham Lewis House Museum Blue Springs Missouri Dillingham Lewis House Museum Blue Springs Missouri Built in 1906 the only native limestone structure in Blue Springs The house is named after two families Fort Osage National Historic Site Sibley Missouri Part of the early 19th century U S factory trading post system for the Osage Nation Jackson County Jail and Marshal s House Independence Missouri Former jail site operated by the county historical society which housed thousands of prisoners including Frank James and William Clark Quantrill Leila s Hair Museum Independence Missouri Leila s Hair Museum Independence Missouri A museum of hair art since the 19th century Lone Jack Battlefield Museum Lone Jack Missouri Lone Jack Battlefield Museum Lone Jack The only Civil War Museum in Jackson County Missouri and one of the few battlefields where the soldiers who perished during the battle are still buried on the battlefield Midwest Genealogy Center Independence Missouri The largest freestanding public genealogy research library in the USA Photo of The National Frontier Trails Museum in Independence Missouri National Frontier Trails Museum Independence Missouri A museum interpretive center and research library about the history of principal western U S trails Rice Tremonti Home Raytown Missouri Rice Tremonti Home Raytown Missouri Home built on the Santa Fe Trail in 1844 by Archibald Rice and his family Cable Dahmer Arena Independence Missouri A 5 800 seat multi purpose arena that hosts the Kansas City Mavericks ice hockey team Harry S Truman Historic District Independence and Grandview Missouri Associated with 33rd U S President Harry S Truman the district includes The Truman Presidential Library in Independence The Truman home in Independence where Truman lived for most of his time in Missouri The Truman Farm in Grandview built in 1894 by Truman s maternal grandmother Truman Sports Complex Kansas City Missouri Two major sports venues Arrowhead Stadium Kansas City Chiefs football Kauffman Stadium Kansas City Royals baseball Grinter Place Kansas City Kansas A home built in 1857 by one of the earliest settlers Architecture EditMain article Architecture of Kansas City The architecture of Kansas City Missouri and the metropolitan area includes major works by many of the world s most distinguished architects and firms including McKim Mead and White Jarvis Hunt Wight and Wight Graham Anderson Probst and White Hoit Price amp Barnes Frank Lloyd Wright the Office of Mies van der Rohe Barry Byrne Edward Larrabee Barnes Harry Weese and Skidmore Owings amp Merrill The KCTV Tower is a 1 042 feet 318 m pyramid shaped television and radio tower used primarily by local CBS affiliate KCTV channel 5 It is at the corner of 31st and Main Streets next to the studio facilities of PBS member station KCPT which formerly housed the original studios of KCTV and is visible from many parts of the city especially at night due to the string of lights adorning the tower The twin red brick towers of the American Century Investments complex are oriented north and south along Main at 45th Street just north of the Country Club Plaza the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art is slightly east and the Nelson Atkins Museum of Art is east and slightly south Kansas City Community Christian Church at 4601 Main Street has a group of lights that shoot a beam upwards to the sky at night Designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in the 1950s it is slightly south of and across the street from the American Century Investment Towers the Nelson Atkins is to the east and the Kemper Museum is to the north and slightly east Bartle Hall has a section that somewhat resembles a north south suspension bridge crossing over I 670 at the southwest corner of the downtown loop It has four towers with metal sculptures on top of each tower The Veterans Affairs Medical Center near the intersection of I 70 Linwood Boulevard and Van Brunt Boulevard has a large VA emblem The Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts at 16th Street and Broadway just south of the downtown loop with its tiered glass and steel half domes has a design reminiscent of the world famous Sydney Opera House Colleges and universities EditTop 5 largest colleges by total enrollment within the MSA 29 1 Johnson County Community College 18 638 2 Metropolitan Community College 17 025 3 University of Missouri Kansas City 16 383 4 Park University 9 512 5 Kansas Christian College Overland Park 200List of institutions including those in the CSA Avila University Kansas City MO Baker University Baldwin City KS Benedictine College Atchison KS Calvary University Kansas City MO Cleveland University Kansas City Kansas City KS DeVry University Kansas City MO Donnelly College Kansas City KS Friends University Lenexa KS Graceland University Independence MO University of Arkansas Grantham Lenexa KS administrative location Haskell Indian Nations University Lawrence KS Johnson County Community College Overland Park KS Kansas Christian College Overland Park KS Kansas City Art Institute Kansas City MO Kansas City Kansas Community College Kansas City KS Kansas City University of Medicine and Biosciences Kansas City MO Kansas State University Olathe Innovation Campus Olathe KS Metropolitan Community College 30 Penn Valley Maple Woods Business and Technology Center Blue River and Longview Kansas City MO MidAmerica Nazarene University Olathe KS Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary Kansas City MO Missouri Western State University St Joseph MO National American University Kansas City MO Nazarene Theological Seminary Kansas City MO Northwest Missouri State University Maryville MO Ottawa University Overland Park KS Park University Parkville MO Pinnacle Career Institute Kansas City KS Pittsburg State University Lenexa KS Rasmussen College Overland Park KS Rockhurst University Kansas City MO Saint Paul School of Theology Leawood KS University of Central Missouri Warrensburg MO University of Kansas Lawrence KS University of Kansas Edwards Campus Overland Park KS University of Kansas Medical Center Kansas City KS University of Missouri Kansas City Kansas City MO University of Saint Mary Leavenworth KS Webster University Webster Groves MO William Jewell College Liberty MOLibraries EditThe metro public library systems include Kansas City Public Library Missouri Mid Continent Public Library Kansas City Kansas Public Library and Johnson County Library Private libraries include the Harry S Truman Presidential Library and Museum and the Linda Hall Library Media EditPrint Edit The Kansas City Star is the metropolitan area s major daily newspaper The McClatchy Company which owns The Star also owns two suburban weeklies Lee s Summit Journal and Olathe Journal The Kansas City Kansan serves Wyandotte County having moved from print to an online format in 2009 Additional weekly papers in the metropolitan area include the Liberty Tribune Sun Newspapers of Johnson County The Examiner in Independence and eastern Jackson County The Pitch and the Kansas Missouri Sentinel The faith based newspapers are The Metro Voice Christian Newspaper and the Jewish Chronicle Dos Mundos is a bilingual newspaper with articles in Spanish and English and Mi Raza magazine is the area s only weekly Hispanic publication printed in Spanish The Kansas City Call is an African American weekly newspaper Broadcast Edit Main article Broadcast Media in Kansas City According to Arbitron about 1 5 million people over the age of 12 live within the Kansas City DMA making it the 30th largest market for radio and 31st for television according to Nielsen The Kansas City television and radio markets cover 32 counties encompassing northwestern Missouri and northeast Kansas Television Edit Television stations in the Kansas City metropolitan area with all major network affiliates represented include WDAF TV channel 4 Fox KCTV channel 5 CBS KMBC TV channel 9 ABC KTAJ TV channel 16 TBN KCPT channel 19 PBS KUKC LD channel 20 Univision KCKS LD channel 25 simulcast of sister station WROB LD KCWE channel 29 The CW KSHB TV channel 41 NBC KMCI TV channel 38 independent KGKC Channel 39 Telemundo Kansas City 31 KPXE TV channel 50 Ion Television KSMO TV channel 62 MyNetworkTV The Kansas City television market is in very close proximity to two other media markets St Joseph and Topeka As such most of the television stations in the Kansas City area are receivable over the air in portions of both markets including their principal cities likewise stations from Topeka are receivable as far east as Kansas City Kansas and stations from St Joseph are viewable as far south as Kansas City Missouri s immediate northern suburbs Radio Edit Over 30 FM and 20 AM radio stations broadcast in the Kansas City area with stations from Topeka St Joseph and Carrollton also reaching into the metropolitan area The highest rated radio stations according to Arbitron are WHB 810 AM Sports ESPN Radio Affiliate KPRS 103 3 FM Urban KCMO FM 94 9 Classic Hits KQRC 98 9 FM Rock KRBZ FM 96 5 Alternative KMBZ 98 1 FM News Talk WDAF FM 106 5 Country Kansas City Chiefs flagship KZPT 99 7 Adult Top 40 KCSP 610 AM Sports Kansas City Royals flagship KMXV 93 3 Top 40 KFKF 94 1 Country KCFX 101 1 Classic Rock KCHZ 95 7 FM Top 40 RhythmicPublic and community radio Edit KCUR 89 3 FM NPR affiliate KANU FM 91 5 and KTBG 90 9 FM both college radio stations also NPR affiliates KKFI 90 1 FM Locally owned not for profit station KGSP 1480 FM Park University college stationSpecialty radio Edit Hispanics who account for 8 of the market s population are specifically served by three AM radio stations who broadcast in Spanish KCZZ 1480 AM Spanish Sports ESPN Deportes talk KDTD 1340 AM Mexican regional KYYS 1250 AM Classic hitsBusiness interests EditThe Kansas City metropolitan area s largest private employer is Cerner Corporation 32 Cerner a global healthcare IT company which is headquartered in North Kansas City employs nearly 10 000 people in the area with a total workforce of nearly 20 000 people including global employees In August 2014 the company announced its acquisition of competitor Siemens Healthcare 33 Cerner has several campuses across the area with its World Headquarters building in North Kansas City Innovations Campus in South Kansas City and Continuous Campus in Kansas City Kansas Other major employers and business enterprises are AT amp T BNSF Railway GEICO Asurion T Mobile Citigroup EMBARQ Farmers Insurance Group Garmin Hallmark Cards Husqvarna H amp R Block General Motors Honeywell Ford Motor Company MillerCoors State Street Corporation The Kansas City Star and Waddell amp Reed some of which are headquartered in the metropolitan area Kansas City also has a large pharmaceutical industry with companies such as Bayer and Aventis having a large presence Headquarters Edit These are among the largest companies and organizations excluding educational institutions that are headquartered in or have since relocated from the metropolitan area Headquarters of most are located in Kansas City Missouri American Century Investments an investment management firm AMC Theatres a movie theater chain Leawood Kansas Andrews McMeel Universal a syndication and publication company which represents media entertainment features such as Dear Abby Garfield Calvin and Hobbes and Doonesbury Applebee s a restaurant chain Lenexa Kansas relocated to Glendale California in 2015 BATS Global Markets a stock exchange Lenexa Kansas Black amp Veatch Corporation engineering firm Overland Park Kansas CenturyLink formerly Embarq Corporation telecommunications company headquarters in Monroe Louisiana Cerner supplier of healthcare information technology solutions North Kansas City Missouri Church of the Nazarene Commerce Bancshares a bank serving Kansas Missouri and Illinois Community of Christ International Headquarters Independence Missouri DST Systems provider of information processing and computer software services and products Engineered Air worldwide supplier and manufacturer of industrial air conditioners De Soto Fellowship of Christian Athletes FCA Ferrellgas retailer and distributor of natural gas Liberty Missouri FishNet Security a provider of information security services and technology resale Overland Park KS Fort Dodge Animal Health an animal health pharmaceutical and vaccine manufacturer and a division of Wyeth Overland Park Kansas Freightquote com largest online third party logistics provider Garmin largest maker of GPS based electronics Olathe Kansas Goodcents Subs and Pastas notable midwest restaurant chain De Soto Hallmark Cards largest maker of greeting cards in the U S HNTB Corporation architectural and engineering firm H amp R Block financial corporation and former parent company of CompuServe known mostly for their income tax preparation services Hostess Brands Maker of Twinkies and other snack cakes Huhtamaki makers of Chinet paper dinnerware De Soto Inergy L P retailers and distributors of natural gas International Brotherhood of Boilermakers Iron Ship Builders Blacksmiths Forgers and Helpers J E Dunn Construction Group construction contractor Kansas City Board of Trade a commodity futures and options exchange Kansas City Power and Light Company a regulated provider of electricity and energy related products and services Kansas City Southern Industries operators of a Class I railroad Lockton Companies the largest privately held insurance brokerage in the U S Merck Health Institutions pharmaceutical corporation De Soto MK12 Studios a filmmaking animation and design studio National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics NAIA Newport Television privately held broadcasting company North Kansas City Hospital North Kansas City Missouri People to People International a voluntary organization founded by President Dwight Eisenhower Perceptive Software makers of Image NOW software Lenexa Kansas Polsinelli AmLaw100 ranked national law firm Populous formerly HOK Sport Venue Event a major sports architectural firm Russell Stover Candies T Mobile which is retaining the former Sprint campus as a secondary headquarters Overland Park Kansas Tradebot a high frequency trading firm UMB Financial Corporation a commercial bank serving a multi state area of the Midwest Unity Church Veterans of Foreign Wars Waddell amp Reed an investment management and brokerage firm Overland Park Kansas Walton Construction a construction contractor YRC Worldwide Inc known mostly from its former name and brand Yellow Freight one of the largest transportation service providers in the world Overland Park Kansas The Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank is one of twelve such banks located in the United States Hospitals Edit AdventHealth Shawnee Mission Centerpoint Medical Center Children s Mercy Hospital Kansas City Orthopaedic Institute Kansas City Veterans Affairs Hospital Kindred Hospital Kansas City Lee s Summit Medical Center Menorah Medical Center North Kansas City Hospital Olathe Medical Center Overland Park Regional Medical Center Providence Medical Center Research Medical Center St Joseph Medical Center Saint Luke s Hospital of Kansas City Saint Luke s East Hospital Saint Luke s South Hospital St Mary s Medical Center University Health Truman Medical Center University of Kansas Hospital KU Med Center Shopping centers Edit Adams Dairy Landing Blue Ridge Crossing Crown Center Country Club Plaza The Great Mall of the Great Plains Demolished March 2017 Independence Center The Landing Mall Legends Outlets Kansas City Metcalf South Shopping Center Demolished June July 2017 Metro North Mall Demolished 2016 Oak Park Mall Park Place Summit Fair Summit Woods Crossing Town Center Plaza Town Pavilion Ward Parkway Center Zona RosaNatural environment EditThe USDA provides estimates of the number of trees by county in the Kansas City metropolitan area 34 Cass County MO 43 740 Miami County KS 38 700 Leavenworth County KS 332 1000 Jackson County MO 325 4000 Clay County MO 269 4000 Johnson County KS 254 9000 Ray County MO 22 710 Platte County MO 195 900 Wyandotte County KS 653 000 Total 2 494 500The five most common species in the region s urban and rural forest were American elm 28 9 percent northern hackberry 14 0 percent Osage orange 7 2 percent honeylocust 6 7 percent and eastern redcedar 5 0 percent Local organizations EditIrish Museum and Cultural Center Congregation Beth Israel Abraham Voliner South Kansas City Chamber of Commerce Big Brothers Big Sisters of Greater Kansas City ArtsKC Regional Arts Council Central Exchange Shepherd s Center KC CentralNotable people EditMany notable people through history were born in or moved to what is now the Kansas City metropolitan area The list from Kansas City Missouri includes these cartoonists Walt Disney Friz Freleng and Ub Iwerks musicians Count Basie Melissa Etheridge and Eminem Representative Emanuel Cleaver and historical city boss Tom Pendergast actors Ellie Kemper Don Cheadle and Jason Sudeikis reporter Walter Cronkite pilot Amelia Earhart and writer Ernest Hemingway The list from Kansas City Kansas includes actors Eric Stonestreet Scott Foley and Tuc Watkins Kermit the Frog puppeteer Matt Vogel West Side Story cinematographer Daniel L Fapp Marvel Comics writer Jason Aaron sculptor and pioneering black pilot Ed Dwight Jr Negro leagues player Ed Dwight Sr and mass murderer Richard Hickock The list from Independence Missouri includes President Harry S Truman Guns N Roses keyboardist Chris Pitman eSports player Jonathan Wendel actor Arliss Howard Devo co founder Bob Lewis self freed slave and Oregon Trail pioneer Hiram Young Pulitzer winning historian David McCullough actor Ginger Rogers rapper Tech N9ne fantasy novelist Margaret Weis television series creator Paul Henning and black female Civil War soldier Cathay Williams From Overland Park Kansas this includes film directors Michael Almereyda Hamlet and Darren Lynn Bousman Saw actors Rob Riggle and Tom Kane economist and writer Michael R Strain and eSports player Johnathan Wendel From Lenexa Kansas this includes actors Paul Rudd and Jason Wiles gunfighter Wild Bill Hickok and autism researcher William Shaw From Olathe Kansas this includes George Washington Carver From Lee s Summit this includes Bob Cole Jim and John of the James Younger Gang See also EditPortals Geography North America United States KansasReferences Edit Annual Estimates of the Resident Population April 1 2010 to July 1 2018 United States Census Bureau Population Division April 2019 Archived from the original on February 13 2020 Retrieved May 30 2019 Official web site of the Country Club Plaza Archived from the original on October 11 2011 Retrieved October 12 2011 Library district walking tour Archived 2012 11 01 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved August 4 2013 The Union Hill Historic District Archived 2013 08 08 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved August 4 2013 Living in Greater Downtown Niche Living in Midtown Plaza Niche U S Census Bureau QuickFacts Johnson County Kansas www census gov Kansas City metro adds 5 900 plus people in a year Which counties are behind that growth Kansas City business journal Gross domestic product by county 2020 PDF Bureau of Economic Analysis U S Census Bureau QuickFacts Wyandotte County Kansas www census gov U S Census Bureau QuickFacts Cass County Missouri www census gov U S Census Bureau QuickFacts Leavenworth County Kansas www census gov U S Decennial Census United States Census Bureau Retrieved May 18 2014 Historical Census Browser University of Virginia Library Retrieved May 18 2014 Population of Counties by Decennial Census 1900 to 1990 United States Census Bureau Retrieved May 18 2014 Census 2000 PHC T 4 Ranking Tables for Counties 1990 and 2000 PDF United States Census Bureau Retrieved May 18 2014 Open Data Network Open Data Network Retrieved September 14 2021 Bulletin PDF Office of Management and Budget Retrieved July 10 2013 via National Archives Combined Statistical Areas of the U S and P R PDF US Census September 2018 Retrieved September 14 2021 Our Campaigns United States Missouri President www ourcampaigns com Retrieved March 11 2022 Kansas City Area Employment February 2020 Mountain Plains Information Office U S Bureau of Labor Statistics www bls gov Lenk Frank October 24 2019 2020 Economic Forecast Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce Retrieved May 2 2022 publicpurpose com publicpurpose com January 10 2002 Archived from the original on September 27 2011 Retrieved October 12 2011 With Paseo name change going up for vote KC historian looks back at street s roots June 8 2019 Kansas City voters approve streetcar plan Kansas City Business Journal Archived from the original on July 30 2013 Retrieved January 26 2013 FAQS KC Streetcar Retrieved June 10 2019 Maps and Schedules KCATA Archived from the original on April 20 2010 Retrieved March 16 2010 Light Rail and MAX KCATA Archived from the original on January 15 2010 Retrieved March 16 2010 Diaz Camacho Vicky December 1 2017 Largest Kansas City Area Colleges and Universities Kansas City Business Journal Retrieved September 14 2021 Metropolitan Community College Kansas City Mcckc edu Archived from the original on October 11 2011 Retrieved October 12 2011 KGKC Wikidata Q64760086 Top of the List Private sector employers Archived from the original on September 16 2014 Retrieved September 16 2014 Newsroom Cerner com cerner com Archived from the original on September 16 2014 Retrieved April 27 2018 https www nrs fs fed us pubs rb rb nrs75 pdf bare URL PDF Further reading EditSee also List of books about Kansas including historical information about its counties and cities Shortridge James R Kansas City and How It Grew 1822 2011 University Press of Kansas 2012 248 pages historical geographyExternal links EditKansas City metropolitan area at Wikipedia s sister projects Travel information from Wikivoyage Data from Wikidata VisitKC com DowntownKC org 2010 KC Census Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kansas City metropolitan area amp oldid 1134551148, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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