The New England Library District
The Downtown Loop 112 West 9th Street, Kansas City, MO 64105
- Studio – 1 bed
- Pets allowed
- Parking
Sunny’s AI summary
Property location
112 West 9th Street, Kansas City, MO 64105Pricing and availability
- 1 Bed 1 Bath
- 1 bed
- ·1 bath
$2,550+1Starting atUnit availableUnit 1 Bed 1 Bath-1
$2,550
Amenities
- In unit laundry
- Google fiber
- Nest technology
- Dishwasher
- Pet friendly
- Garage
Property details
The New England Building, constructed in 1887, is located in the heart of Downtown Kansas Citys Library District just a few steps from the Streetcar. Within this gracious structure, seven floors have been renovated into 32 distinctive apartments. Unit features include designer flooring, stone counter tops, slate appliances, tile showers, nest thermostats, walk-in closets and washer/dryers. In addition, several of the apartments are adorned with cast iron fireplace mantels, bankers vaults and an oriel window. The New Englands amenities consist of a modern fitness studio located within the buildings central vault, the Howard Hughes Lounge, the North View Nooks, grand marble hallways, attached garage parking, resident storage and Google Fiber. Several neighborhood amenities such as restaurants, bars and coffee shops are mere steps away via walking while popular destinations such as the Power & Light District and venues such as the Midland Theater, the Sprint Center and the Municipal Auditorium are located a few blocks south of The New England. The River Market district, another immensely popular destination to the north, features both locally-grown fruits and vegetables and more exotic fares such as ethiopian, vietnamese and brazilian cuisines. The north and southbound Streetcar stations connecting you to both of these areas can be found on Main Street, just two blocks east. This Landmark Property is a tangible reminder of the substantial investments of eastern capital made in Kansas City during the late nineteenth-century building boom. Once home to Trans World Airlines, it is a rare surviving example of commercial architecture adapted from the Renaissance Revival style. The south and west exterior walls of the New England are constructed of rose colored Springfield sandstone shipped from Massachusetts. A two-story oriel window at the southwest corner of the building has carved stone panels at its base that bear the seals of five New England States. Stylistically the New England has no real equivalent in Kansas City. Its architectural design ties it to the roots of tradition and provides possibly the earliest example of fire-proof construction in Kansas City.