What’s the deal with The Roasterie’s rooftop airplane?

There’s a real-life cargo plane perched on top of The Roasterie’s factory cafe. Here’s when, how, and why it ended up there.

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Give us a cup of coffee, and we’re ready for liftoff too.

Photo by The Roasterie via Trozzolo

If you’re driving on Southwest Boulevard or north on I-35 toward downtown, you’ve probably noticed a giant airplane frozen mid-takeoff, hoisted on curved metal supports on top of The Roasterie Factory Cafe .

How did it end up there? What was the reason? All good questions — and we’re here to answer them.

Meet Betty

First and foremost — the plane’s name is Betty, named after founder Danny O’Neill’s mom. She was placed in 2012, crane lifted the same year the Factory Café opened to the public.

The DC-3 plane is a fixed-wing, propeller-driven aircraft that “revolutionized air transport in the 1930s and 40s,” according to The Roasterie.

The aircraft’s significance

“DC-3’s just like ours were often used to haul coffee beans around the globe,” the company’s website states .

The airplane is also symbolic of how the company originally roasted its coffee. Air roasting blasts the beans with heated air as the beans are rotated. You can see the plane in the company’s logo.

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Travis is a launch editor for KCtoday and is based in Kansas City, MO. He previously worked for local news stations such as FOX4KC after earning his degree at the Missouri School of Journalism. In his free time, he loves to mountain bike, play the saxophone, and talk extensively about coffee + urban design.
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