Public Works?

Join us for an in-depth look at our metro’s infrastructure system with comprehensive original reporting. We take you underneath the pavement to tackle the state of our water and sewers. We track the state of highways and bridges in Kansas and Missouri. We take a closer look at our public transit system. And, perhaps most importantly, we convene policymakers and industry leaders in search of solutions.
Follow the entire project here, and ask us your infrastructure questions.

President Joe Biden speaks Wednesday from the Kansas City Area Transportation Authority in Kansas City, Missouri.

‘Americans Always Rebuild’: Biden Promotes Infrastructure Investments in Kansas City Speech

President Joe Biden on Wednesday visited the Kansas City Area Transportation Authority to tout the $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill he signed into law last month, expected to bring billions in spending on roads and bridges, clean water, public transportation, high speed internet and more to Kansas and Missouri.

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Playground at Troost Park

New City Beautiful Movement: Restoring KC’s Parks and Boulevards

A new Urban Land Institute study recommends ways the Kansas City Parks and Recreation Department can improve parks more equitably across the city.

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Quinton Lucas shovels asphalt

State Of Emergency: Kansas City Goes Into Overdrive To Fix Potholes

Kansas City is responding to mounting complaints about potholes on city streets.

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How’s It Moving? We Check In A Year After Our Infrastructure Project

Last spring, we dug into the state of metro roads, highways, sewers and public transportation in a project called Public Works? The Cost of Our Aging Infrastructure. We’ve continued to follow the topics to see if anything has changed in a year’s time. Our weekly public affairs shows, Ruckus and Week in Review, track progress —…

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A man and woman walking in a basement

Are Rental Inspections Good For a City?

We follow two Missouri cities — Independence, which recently passed a rental inspection measure and Kansas City, which takes its to the voters in August — in this vignette that’s part of our “Public Works? A Level Foundation” series. [FLEX-CONTENT] — Follow Flatland @FlatlandKC

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Illustration showing apartment building with possible bomb or explosive situation

A Clash of the Way In

Rachel Miskec watches the news each night and worries she’ll see an apartment fire in Kansas City, Kansas. “If something bad happens, I know someone is going to ask us when did you go into [the apartment] last,” said Miskec, the coordinator of the rental license program for the Unified Government of Wyandotte County and…

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The Clarence Sondern House

Exploring Frank Lloyd Wright’s Naturalistic Legacy

By Christopher G. Olszewski Our area certainly has some distinctive architecture, including the art deco Power & Light Building in downtown Kansas City and the massive new Church of the Resurrection sanctuary in Leawood, Kansas. Before those bricks were laid, one of the world’s most famous architects left his mark on Kansas City. During a…

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Jelisa Bernardo collects her belongings

Changed Locks: Getting Evicted in Wyandotte

It takes two minutes for the woman in the wheelchair to roll in front of Judge R. Wayne Lawson. It only takes another two minutes for her to be legally evicted. “You have to leave, just not today,” Lawson tells her. The plaintiff’s lawyer asks her to wait for him in the hallway. He still…

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Research intern Ryan Hennessy works on a data visualization that came from information he collected over 44 days in the Wyandotte County Courthouse.

How’d We Get This Data? See the Human Side of Records Analysis

44 days. That’s how long it took our research intern to obtain all the eviction information for Wyandotte County. Across that month and a half, Flatland’s Ryan Hennessy spent about six hours a day combing eviction records the only place they were available: on one of three public computers on the first floor of the…

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The Apartment fight cover photo.

Affordable Housing: The Apartment Fight

When the Kansas City Housing Authority won a coveted $30 million federal grant in 2015 to tear down Chouteau Courts, a low-income housing project east of downtown, and replace it with mixed-income housing, housing advocates were thrilled. But when the Northland was proposed as a location for one of the new properties, area residents took…

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