Webster House Closing, but Helzberg has No Plans to Walk Away
April 22, 2020 | Kevin Collison | 3 min read
By Kevin Collison
Faced with a pandemic shut-down and the likelihood its important patron, the Kauffman Center, may remain dark until at least fall, Shirley Helzberg had no choice but to close her labor of love, the Webster House, permanently.
“The Kauffman Center isn’t opening until at least fall and the symphony and other arts are looking at fall openings, too,” she said.
“There are so many unknowns. I just knew we could never come back in the same fashion.
“Because of its uniqueness and importance to the community, and because so many people loved it with all the special occasions they celebrated there, it’s a real heartbreak for me.”
Helzberg however, has no plan to sell the historic building that she rescued from decay in 2000 and reopened in 2002 with a renowned restaurant upstairs and high-end antique shop and boutique below.
The 135 year-old school house building at 17th and Wyandotte recently had significant exterior repairs and is in excellent condition. A 182-space garage built across the street to serve it and other organizations is only six years old.

A 182-space garage was built to serve the Webster House and other tenants in 2014.
“Our family would like to maintain ownership,” she said. “We have no intention of selling. The main thing is to thank people for their support.”
The Helzberg family’s restoration of perhaps Kansas City’s only surviving Richardson Romanesque Style buildings from the 1880s, according to its National Register application, came at pivotal time early in downtown’s 21st Century revival.
Much of the now-thriving Crossroads neighborhood was blighted and deserted then, and the idea a world-class performing arts center that would be home to the city’s symphony and opera would be built next door was not on the radar.
Helzberg said the old school building was in terrible condition. It had been vacant since 1977. The building was renovated and a new bell tower had to be fashioned from metal. The bell itself was purchased in Cleveland.

The Webster School building was in poor condition when this photo was taken in 1981. (Photo from National Register of Historic Places application)
“It was a joy for me,” she said. “There weren’t many other venues downtown for events.
“Downtown has changed a lot since then and we were so excited when the Kauffman Center opened and the restaurant was busy.”
As for the future uses of the building, Helzberg said it was soon to tell, although she’s already had several inquiries.
“The garage gets great occupancy when there’s something at the Kauffman Center,” she said, “and it also provides parking for symphony musicians and the other tenants it was built to serve.”
Her immediate plans are to determine how to sell the current inventory, including a new line of summer clothes that had recently arrived at the boutique.
“Hopefully, before the end of the summer, our merchandise will be sold,” she said.
(Editor’s note: CityScene KC is now a paid subscription publication, please consider subscribing.)
Reading these stories is free, but telling them is not. Start your monthly gift now to support Flatland’s community-focused reporting.
Related Stories
Nick’s Picks | Messi, Jail, Buses, and More …
World Cup Team(s) Arrive It’s starting to feel real. The first World Cup team has landed in Kansas City. Defending champions Argentina touched down at KCI airport on Sunday and will begin practicing today at Sporting KC’s training facility in Wyandotte County. Much of the attention, of course, is focused on Lionel Messi. The soccer…
World Cup ‘Statement Piece’ Evokes Best Version of Kansas City
Before I moved to Kansas City almost 56 years ago, I had been here only once — for a brief visit to the Kansas City Press Club when I was attending the University of Missouri School of Journalism. But because of that visit and the fact that I grew up in the Midwest (Woodstock, Illinois,…
KU Center Helps Women Gain Foothold After Incarceration
A flier from her probation officer was the turning point for Jodi Whitt, who had spent more than two decades in and out of the criminal justice system. The piece of paper introduced Whitt to the Technology Education Program offered by the University of Kansas’ Center for Digital Inclusion. Since 2019, Whitt has risen through…


