Bridgeport Church moving into El Torreon Ballroom

People say they enjoy Kansas City. Find out why.
User avatar
WinchesterMysteryHouse
Colonnade
Colonnade
Posts: 783
Joined: Mon Jul 31, 2006 6:54 pm

Bridgeport Church moving into El Torreon Ballroom

Post by WinchesterMysteryHouse »

A business owner on 31st Street is telling me that Bridgeport Church is moving into El Torreon Ballroom.
Anyone hear anything about this possibility?
The former tenant, Cowtown Mallroom, closed up shop this past weekend.
ColumbusParkian
Western Auto Lofts
Western Auto Lofts
Posts: 571
Joined: Tue Jan 13, 2009 9:41 pm

Re: Bridgeport Church moving into El Torreon Ballroom

Post by ColumbusParkian »

For fucks sake. A church taking over ANOTHER venue? And yes, I know that El Torreon hasn't held shows in quite some time, but it gets on my nerves that in the urban core of Kansas City you can throw a rock in the air and it'll land on some hip church.
User avatar
smh
Supporter
Posts: 4312
Joined: Tue Jun 08, 2010 10:40 pm
Location: Central Loop

Re: Bridgeport Church moving into El Torreon Ballroom

Post by smh »

Lame.
User avatar
chaglang
Bryant Building
Bryant Building
Posts: 4132
Joined: Wed Jan 04, 2012 12:44 pm

Re: Bridgeport Church moving into El Torreon Ballroom

Post by chaglang »

Sucks that there isn't a music venue going in there. But the hipster churches have brought money and families into midtown. I don't know much about Bridgeport, but if they're anything like Redeemer, this is a net positive for the area.
User avatar
taxi
Penntower
Penntower
Posts: 2101
Joined: Thu Feb 08, 2007 12:32 am
Location: North End
Contact:

Re: Bridgeport Church moving into El Torreon Ballroom

Post by taxi »

ColumbusParkian wrote:For fucks sake. A church taking over ANOTHER venue? And yes, I know that El Torreon hasn't held shows in quite some time, but it gets on my nerves that in the urban core of Kansas City you can throw a rock in the air and it'll land on some hip church.
Throw more rocks!
User avatar
KCtoBrooklyn
Alameda Tower
Alameda Tower
Posts: 1261
Joined: Tue Jan 16, 2007 4:01 pm

Re: Bridgeport Church moving into El Torreon Ballroom

Post by KCtoBrooklyn »

Here is what apparently happened:

The church was going to be moving into space on the first floor and Cowtown was going to still be operating in the upstairs ballroom space. This is why they changed from Sundays to Saturdays to not have conflicts with parking.

Due to some sort of permit/inspections that the church needed, some city inspectors were brought in and hammered Cowtown with some expensive building work that would be required to stay open (apparently including things like a passenger elevator).

I'm not sure if the church is still going to try to make the building work. Cowtown Mallroom is looking at other spaces in the immediate area.
User avatar
WinchesterMysteryHouse
Colonnade
Colonnade
Posts: 783
Joined: Mon Jul 31, 2006 6:54 pm

Re: Bridgeport Church moving into El Torreon Ballroom

Post by WinchesterMysteryHouse »

Did Bridgeport purchase or sign a lease?
User avatar
KCtoBrooklyn
Alameda Tower
Alameda Tower
Posts: 1261
Joined: Tue Jan 16, 2007 4:01 pm

Re: Bridgeport Church moving into El Torreon Ballroom

Post by KCtoBrooklyn »

WinchesterMysteryHouse wrote:Did Bridgeport purchase or sign a lease?
I believe they were going to do a lease-to-own/owner finance type of deal. I would guess that is no longer happening.

Looks like the flea market has a new spot lined up and is planning on reopening fairly soon.
heatherkay
Alameda Tower
Alameda Tower
Posts: 1424
Joined: Tue Feb 14, 2006 10:39 am
Location: River Market and Rosedale

Re: Bridgeport Church moving into El Torreon Ballroom

Post by heatherkay »

That's interesting. The stories I've been reading from Cowtown vendors make it sound like the church kicked them out.
loftguy
Bryant Building
Bryant Building
Posts: 3850
Joined: Fri Sep 16, 2005 12:12 pm

Re: Bridgeport Church moving into El Torreon Ballroom

Post by loftguy »

Sounds like the owner went from having a building that was about to be full,
to one that is fully empty.

Ruh roh.
User avatar
rxlexi
Penntower
Penntower
Posts: 2294
Joined: Sun Dec 14, 2003 10:30 pm
Location: Briarcliff

Re: Bridgeport Church moving into El Torreon Ballroom

Post by rxlexi »

Man, no matter what the outcome here, I am disappointed. Was hoping that cowtown getting "kicked out" might have meant the building had sold and plans were a brewin' for renovation into a sweet music venue/restaurant/bar/theater to anchor 31st/Martini Corner. How wrong I was.

A church in this building would SO lame. And the continued operation of a small flea market a few days a week isn't a whole lot better. Why hasn't this corridor taken off in a more meaningful way over the past decade? I seem to recall vague plans to renovate El Torreon some years ago?
Joe Smith
Western Auto Lofts
Western Auto Lofts
Posts: 602
Joined: Thu Feb 11, 2010 1:15 pm
Location: KCMO

Re: Bridgeport Church moving into El Torreon Ballroom

Post by Joe Smith »

The Cowtown Mallroom was in it's basic form, a junk store. There were a few vendors that had some unique stuff, but it was a Thrift Store/Swap & Shop type of place. Actually, it was lower quality and less selection. A lot of dusty junk.
User avatar
Highlander
City Center Square
City Center Square
Posts: 10208
Joined: Mon Jun 28, 2004 1:40 pm
Location: Houston

Re: Bridgeport Church moving into El Torreon Ballroom

Post by Highlander »

ColumbusParkian wrote:For fucks sake. A church taking over ANOTHER venue? And yes, I know that El Torreon hasn't held shows in quite some time, but it gets on my nerves that in the urban core of Kansas City you can throw a rock in the air and it'll land on some hip church.
Kind of the opposite of what is happening in Europe where churches are regularly being converted into bars and restaurants (and homes). Several very old churches in the city I lived in while in Scotland were functioning as bars. Apparently, the trend is beginning in the US too....

http://convertedchurches.wordpress.com/
kansas
Pad site
Pad site
Posts: 76
Joined: Fri Jun 18, 2010 11:55 am

Re: Bridgeport Church moving into El Torreon Ballroom

Post by kansas »

I'm more bewildered by the city. It seems that KCMO is trying to improve itself by holding up buyers of property the moment they scent someone who may be worried by a nuisance violation. Which honestly just drives investment away when done with a hammer. And KCMO is hammering. A bit of considered examination of projects might serve the city better.
earthling
Mark Twain Tower
Mark Twain Tower
Posts: 8519
Joined: Sun Sep 11, 2011 2:27 pm
Location: milky way, orion arm

Re: Bridgeport Church moving into El Torreon Ballroom

Post by earthling »

Highlander wrote: Kind of the opposite of what is happening in Europe where churches are regularly being converted into bars and restaurants (and homes). Several very old churches in the city I lived in while in Scotland were functioning as bars. Apparently, the trend is beginning in the US too....

http://convertedchurches.wordpress.com/
Yeah, Europe as a whole is becoming significantly less religious, only about half believe there is a god and even less identify with a religion, so a lot of empty churches available. The US is rising in those who claim no religion (from <10% a couple decades ago to near 20% now and rising) but it seems many who identify with a religion are becoming more churchy. Various explanations are that American TV evangelism, high mobility, insecurity, growing distrust in science and polarizing politics with a faction that promotes theocracy are influencing more religious extroversion in US compared to low key religious dependency/introversion in Europe (outside immigrants). So even though non-religious is growing, those who are religious seem to be getting louder and more communal.

In KC there's a 'hipster' church trend in city core lately who apparently don't care for stodgy trad church environment and prefer warehouse conversion type places. I'm not sure but it seems they lean more spiritual than say bible literalists.

BTW, overall KC is less religious than the largest US metros (falls around the middle of about 50 metros) according to...
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/05/1 ... 22644.html

If 50% of US is religiously 'adherent' or 'active' and near 20% calling themselves non-religious, will be interesting to see how the rest of the 30% play out over next couple decades because it appears both non-religious and religiously active are growing in US, especially religiously extroverted.
mean
Administrator
Administrator
Posts: 11238
Joined: Wed Feb 05, 2003 9:00 am
Location: Historic Northeast

Re: Bridgeport Church moving into El Torreon Ballroom

Post by mean »

earthling wrote: it appears both non-religious and religiously active are growing in US, especially religiously extroverted.
At least to some degree, I imagine these two facts feed off each other. Increasing non-religious may galvanize the religious to be more vocal, while increasingly vocal religious may push moderates and sympathizers toward non-religion. It probably doesn't help that almost everyone I've ever known who I'd consider "vocally religious" is either 50+ or dead. Among my peers, I can count the vocally religious I know on one hand, and among younger generations, I don't know any.
earthling
Mark Twain Tower
Mark Twain Tower
Posts: 8519
Joined: Sun Sep 11, 2011 2:27 pm
Location: milky way, orion arm

Re: Bridgeport Church moving into El Torreon Ballroom

Post by earthling »

Is curious though to compare to Europe.

Younger Americans more and more buy less into traditional religion but many still have a dependency on the idea of a higher being to explain the world around them or to address needs that aren't being met. After having kids, the US trend is apparently that a good chunk embrace the communal aspect and some water down traditional religion to adapt to their contemp tastes (ie, hipster Christians) where in Europe god(s) are less considered as an explanation (maybe it's the metric system, not kidding), they seem to be becoming less communal and don't bother adapting ideas of supernatural forces into contemp views like modern Americans do. Another view is that because Americans are more mobile than Europeans, many rely on communal 'congregation' as a way to adapt to a new city or area. And religious congregation is more established in US than other mediums.

And then there is the introverted/extroverted view. Have run across anthro journals that discuss this, couldn't find a link of those but did find this one that has similar observation...
Extroverts are usually more religious, more likely to literally interpret religious doctrine, more likely to believe in their political party's platforms, more likely to organize themselves into social groups, and more likely to align their beliefs to what other people believe in those same social groups.

On the other hand, introverts are typically less religious, less likely to participate in organized groups, less likely to believe in their political party's platforms, and less likely to give as much weight to what other people believe, inside or outside of their social groups.
http://neuropolitics.org/defaultmar06.asp

The US tends to be considered more extroverted than Europe and those in US who are introverted do seem to be less interested in religion or less likely to consider supernatural forces could address needs that aren't being met and would address it themselves. The highly extroverted might be fundies, TV evangelist enthusiasts or more subtly, talk about church more often in the workplace. Seems the US trend will be a growing force of both and that the mildly religious will shrink, especially in this era of polarized views.

I don't recall anyone discussing church in the workplace in the 80s/90s unless asking something that leads to it. I talk to people around US every workday and churchyness or a 'praise Jesus' type comment comes up unsolicited more often than past, even in large teleconference meetings. The city with most church talk in meetings - Minneapolis. But to be fair they can also bring up other unrelated topics in meetings more often than others.
IraGlacialis
Colonnade
Colonnade
Posts: 895
Joined: Tue Feb 12, 2008 10:02 pm
Location: Bangkok

Re: Bridgeport Church moving into El Torreon Ballroom

Post by IraGlacialis »

mean wrote:
earthling wrote: Among my peers, I can count the vocally religious I know on one hand, and among younger generations, I don't know any.
Could it simply be generational perception?
Because if, by "vocal religious", you mean not just devout or even church-going but prone to impart their faith into almost any aspect of their conversation, I know more than a sizable chunk that are my peers and younger.

And I wouldn't say that moderates are pushed into non-religion (unless you mean simply non-denomination or non-church-going); rather many are simply more likely to keep their faith even more closely to themselves and only discuss it among those who they know are of moderate persuasion.
earthling
Mark Twain Tower
Mark Twain Tower
Posts: 8519
Joined: Sun Sep 11, 2011 2:27 pm
Location: milky way, orion arm

Re: Bridgeport Church moving into El Torreon Ballroom

Post by earthling »

^quote edit mishap. mean said that.
mean
Administrator
Administrator
Posts: 11238
Joined: Wed Feb 05, 2003 9:00 am
Location: Historic Northeast

Re: Bridgeport Church moving into El Torreon Ballroom

Post by mean »

IraGlacialis wrote: if, by "vocal religious", you mean not just devout or even church-going but prone to impart their faith into almost any aspect of their conversation, I know more than a sizable chunk that are my peers and younger.
Yeah, I mean not just casually, personally religious, but actively, vocally, even loudly religious in a way that I'd roughly equate to the teenager who discovers punk rock and revamps their entire wardrobe, personality, and hairstyle, then evangelizes the holy word of Ramones records to all their friends who still think Bieber is the thing.
Post Reply