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Do you own a landmark? Check the Kansas City Register of Historic Places.

Structures deemed significant have special protections + rules regarding exterior renovations, upkeep, and demolition. Check if your home falls under this designation, along with tools to research its history.

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The 19 homes along Janssen Place are listed on both the National and Kansas City Registers of Historic Places.

Kansas City wasn’t even called “Kansas City” when this 1888 beauty went up. Now, 31st + Main’s red-brick Victorian sentinel, the Jeserich Building, and its three neighbors have landed on the city’s Dangerous Buildings list after sitting vacant for years.

The property’s new owners (who bought it in 2024) have done little beyond asking to cut the water line — often an early sign of demolition, The Kansas City Star notes.

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The Jeserich Building, also known as the Tower Building, circa 1989.

That’s despite the structure’s spot on the KC Register of Historic Places, which is supposed to give the Historic Preservation Commission a say over exterior changes to protected sites. (If you’ve followed West 39th’s leaning Loretto Academy tower story, you’ve seen this in action.)

Want to keep other historic spots standing? See if you’re eligible to nominate a building, district, or landmark for local historic status online.

For the architecture nerds among us:

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