Kansas City Missouri

Kansas City Missouri Temple Wiki

Quick Facts

ANNOUNCED
4 October 2008

ANNOUNCED BY
President Thomas S. Monson

GROUNDBREAKING
8 May 2010

GROUNDBREAKING PRESIDED BY
Elder Ronald A. Rasband

DEDICATED
6 May 2012

DEDICATED BY
Elder Thomas S. Monson


DEDICATION ORDER
137

LOCATION
7001 Searcy Creek Pkwy
Kansas City, Missouri 64119-5336
United States

Description

History

The first attempt to build a temple in the Kansas City area was made by the early Saints in the 1830s when a temple site was dedicated in Independence, Missouri, in 1831. The site for a second temple was dedicated farther north in Far West, Missouri, in 1838. Those temples were never constructed, however, as the Latter-day Saints were driven out of Missouri pursuant to an extermination order issued by Governor Lilburn W. Boggs in 1838. Latter-day Saints had also settled in Kansas, but they left when Church headquarters were relocated to Nauvoo, Illinois, and then to Salt Lake City, Utah. As Church membership returned and grew in the Midwest beginning at the turn of the century, Kansas City’s first stake was established in 1956. By 2008, Church membership in Kansas and Missouri had grown to 100,000 members in 21 stakes.[1]The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints News Release, “Temple Announced for Greater Kansas City Area,” 4 Oct. 2008.

Announcement

President Thomas S. Monson made the announcement that a temple would be constructed in the greater Kansas City area during the opening session of General Conference on 4 October 2008.

Missouri Temples at the Time of Announcement

Announced

Under Construction

Dedicated

ANNOUNCED ORDER
137

Date2008 10 04
ByThomas S. Monson
RolePresident
ViaGeneral Conference

⮜Preceded by Cordoba Argentina
Followed by Philadelphia Pennsylvania

Location Announcement

At the Liberty Missouri Stake Conference held on Sunday, October 12, 2008, President Lehnardt announced the site for the Kansas City Missouri Temple as west of the intersection of I-435 and Shoal Creek Parkway. The site is situated on a hillside, bordered by Shoal Creek, near the southern tip of Shoal Creek Valley—a beautiful mixed development owned by the Church in northeast Kansas City, just west of the Liberty Jail Historic Site. The temple is expected to be similar in design to the recently dedicated Twin Falls Idaho Temple and to be completed in about three years.[2]Reports from numerous members in the Kansas City area.

February 2009

It was announced that the Church had selected JE Dunn Construction as the general contractors for the temple. “We are proud and humbled that The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints would select JE Dunn as their building partner on the [temple],” said Terry Dunn, CEO. “We look forward to working to provide members of the LDS Church in the Kansas City region a special, holy place to call their own.”[3] “JE Dunn will build LDS temple in Kansas City,” Kansas City Business Journal 3 Feb. 2009, 3 Feb. 2009 http://www.bizjournals.com/kansascity/stories/2009/02/02/daily28.html.

May 21, 2009

Project representatives held a neighborhood meeting at the new patrol station located south of the temple property. About 20 neighbors accepted the invitation to attend where an explanation of the project was presented and questions were entertained.

May 20, 2009

The Kansas City Plats Review Committee considered the site plan, filed April 17, 2009, for the Community Unit Project that features the temple, adjoining meetinghouse, and 140 single family residential units. The plan was moved on for review by the City Plan Commission.[4] Virginia Walsh, City Planning and Development Department, Memorandum on Plats Review Committee Meeting – Wednesday – May 20, 2009, 13 May 2009, 27 Jul. 2009 http://www.kcmo.org/planning/devmgmt/PRC_agendas/2009/5-20-09.pdf.

June 2, 2009

The City Plan Commission of Kansas City unanimously approved with conditions a set of three proposals by Continental Consulting Engineers, Inc., for a 56-acre tract of land—generally located south of NE Shoal Creek Drive, east of Searcy Creek Parkway, west of Interstate 435 and north of NE Pleasant Valley Road—to (1) amend the Shoal Creek Valley Area Plan by changing the recommended land use designation from retail and residential to residential uses (2) rezone from Districts CP-2 (local planned business center district) and RA (agricultural district) to R-5 (high apartment district) and District R-1a (one-family dwelling district – medium density) and (3) approve a Community Unit Project plan for 140 single family residential units (R1-a zone), and a temple and a chapel (R5 zone).[5] “City Plan Commission Docket,” City of Kansas City, Missouri 2 Jun. 2009, 27 Jul. 2009 http://www.kcmo.org/planning/devmgmt/CPC/2009%20Dockets/06-02-09%20CPC%20Docket.pdf.

July 29, 2009

The Kansas City Planning and Zoning Committee (watch video) unanimously recommended to the City Council the proposed Shoal Creek Valley Area Plan amendment, rezoning ordinance, and Community Unit Project that would allow construction of the temple and meetinghouse (9.33 acres) and 140 single family residential units (46.72 acres) on a 56-acre tract of land southwest of the intersection of I-435 and NE Shoal Creek Parkway. The project will be built in four phases, likely beginning with the proposed 27.25-acre Central phase, which features the temple, meetinghouse, 41 single family residential units, and about 5 acres of private open space. The primary access to the temple will be from newly constructed Searcy Creek Parkway. The temple, meetinghouse, and parking complex will be bordered by proposed public streets: NE 70th Terrace, NE 70th Street, and N Ewing Avenue.ref]”Kansas City Council Record,” City of Kansas City, Missouri 30 Jul. 2009.[/ref][6] “Fact Sheet: Case Nos. 405-S-40, 11265-P-1 and 11265-CUP-2,” City of Kansas City, Missouri 2 Jul. 2009, 27 Jul. 2009 http://cityclerk.kcmo.org/liveweb/Documents/ViewAttachment.aspx?q=3xGy6Gmgrg4uZXBXaYrq2emqx%2F8YLaQ9yte1PgdH4PyrdESBdO8uJBtLGgbvMLjXN4TwsV6cOuPuWov9w%2B5XntG3JPYL%2F5YQ

July 30, 2009

The Kansas City Council unanimously adopted a resolution to amend the Shoal Creek Valley Area Plan and unanimously passed a rezoning ordinance and preliminary Community Unit Project for the 56-acre parcel where the Kansas City temple site is located. The preliminary Community Unit Project was approved subject to a list of 28 conditions. The conditions include the granting of various easements to the City, the acquisition of various permits, and the submission of various documents including the following: a plat map; storm drainage study; a street name signage plan; a grading, siltation, and erosion control plan; a final stream buffer plan; covenants, conditions, and restrictions; a tree planting plan; and a final site plan for approval.[7] “Kansas City Council Record,” City of Kansas City, Missouri 30 Jul. 2009, 13 Aug. 2009 <http://cityclerk.kcmo.org/liveweb/Meetings/CouncilMinutes.aspx?

August 18, 2009

The Kansas City Plan Commission recommended approval of The Meadows at Searcy Creek—then described as a 25-lot subdivision on 28.8 acres generally located at the northwest corner of NE Pleasant Valley Road and I-435 in District R-5 and R-1a.[8] “City Plan Commission Docket,” City of Kansas City, Missouri 18 Aug. 2009, 13 Aug. 2009 http://www.kcmo.org/planning/devmgmt/CPC/2009%20Dockets/08-18-09%20CPC%20Docket.pdf.

District R-5, a district for high apartments, was recently established at that location to allow for the height of the temple and an adjoining meetinghouse. District R-1a is a district for one-family dwellings. The Kansas City Plats Review Committee reviewed the plat on August 5, 2009.

Render Released

Sometime in the fall of 2009, a render appeared, likely presented to or in a city meeting, of a preliminary design for the temple. The exact date of release, and the exact place of release, is not known.

October 22, 2009

The Kansas City Council approved the final plat of The Meadows at Searcy Creek First Plat—the subdivision where the Kansas City Missouri Temple will be located. The plat subdivides approximately 26 acres, generally located south of NE Shoal Creek Drive, east of Searcy Creek Parkway, west of Interstate 435 and north of NE Pleasant Valley Road, into one church lot, 22 single family lots, and numerous tracts. A day earlier, on October 21, the Planning and Zoning Committee gave its recommendation of approval to the Council.[9] “Kansas City Council Record,” City of Kansas City, Missouri 22 Oct. 2009, 22 Oct. 2009 <http://cityclerk.kcmo.org/LiveWeb/Meetings/CouncilMinutes.aspx?

December 18, 2009

The official plat of the The Meadows at Searcy Creek First Plat was recorded by the Clay County Recorder of Deeds.

March 1–2, 2010

Numerous permits for the temple were issued contingent on City review for code compliance. The reviews, which are estimated to be completed by mid-April, include a building plan review, general project permit plan review, quality control review, grading and erosion control plan review, storm drainage study review, and miscellaneous items review.[10] “Project Detail,” City of Kansas City, Missouri 6 Mar. 2010 http://kivaweb.kcmo.org/kivanet/2/project/index.cfm?fa=dspjdtl&project;=CR201010837&jur;=KCMO.

March 9, 2010

A special inspections permit was issued for the Kansas City Missouri Temple, which establishes a series of on-site inspections to ensure that construction is following the approved plans and meets City code.

Groundbreaking Announced

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Groundbreaking

On Saturday, May 8, 2010, ground was formally broken for the temple. Elder Ronald A. Rasband of the Presidency of the Seventy presided, and Elder William R. Walker, Executive Director of the Temple Department, was also in attendance. Elder and Sister Rasband and Elder and Sister Walker were among the speakers who emphasized the history and sacrifice of the Saints in Missouri, noting that a large part of the restoration of the gospel took place under the direction of the Prophet Joseph Smith in the area of the temple. The spiritual presence of those early pioneers and leaders could be felt by some in attendance.

Elder Walker remarked that soon after President Hinckley passed away, President Thomas S. Monson turned to him at the at the first Thursday meeting of the general temple committee and said, “Elder Walker, we are not going to slow down one bit in the work of the building of temples.”

Elder Donald D. Deshler, Area Seventy, urged those present to prepare their hearts, to be more like the Savior, and to purify their thoughts and actions to be worthy of the temple when it is completed.

GROUNDBREAKING ORDER
139

Date2010 05 08
ByRonald A. Rasband
RoleSeventy
Attendees##

⮜Preceded by Quetzaltenango Guatemala
Followed by Calgary Alberta

Render Released

Along with the groundbreaking, an official render was released for the Kansas City Missouri Temple.

Finial

On March 24, 2011, crowds gathered to witness the raising of the gold-leafed angel Moroni statue atop the eastern spire of the Kansas City Missouri Temple. The statue and temple’s two spires arrived on site the evening of March 20. The eastern spire went up on March 21 and the western spire of March 22. A finial was installed atop the western spire on March 23, and workers had hoped to install the angel Moroni, too, but winds were too high to proceed.

Dedication announced

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Open House

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Start Dateyyyy mm dd
End Dateyyyy mm dd
Days#
Attendees#
Per dayA/D

Cultural Celebration

The evening before the temple was dedicated, over 3,000 youth gathered to stage a cultural celebration in the Municipal Auditorium entitled “Of One Heart in the Heartland.” Prior to the performance, President Monson addressed the audience stating, “The stately and magnificent Kansas City Temple, in this lovely part of the country—really, the heartland of America—will be dedicated in the morning. It is, of course, the reason for this great celebration.” Highlights of the history of the Kansas City temple district were presented through narration, song, and dance in nine segments: Shining Hearts, Willing Hearts, Inspired Hearts, Courageous Hearts, Changing Hearts, Broken Hearts, Confident Hearts, Sharing Hearts, and Of One Heart. At the conclusion of the program, youth performed through their tears two original compositions written by Wendy V. Dyck entitled “We Believe” and “Of One Heart in the Heartland.”[11]Gerry Avant, “Kansas City Missouri Temple: ‘The reason for this great celebration,'” Church News 5 May 2012, 7 Jul. 2012 <http://www.ldschurchnews.com/articles/62319/Kansas-City-Missouri-Temple-The-reason-for-this-great-celebration.html>.

Dedication

The Kansas City Missouri Temple was dedicated in three sessions by President Thomas S. Monson on May 6, 2012.

On the day of the dedication of the Kansas City Missouri Temple, President Thomas S. Monson, 16th President of the Church, noted that the area was “where the Prophet Joseph Smith walked and where significant events took place in the early days following the Restoration of the gospel.”

“We are all aware of the history of the early Saints in Missouri and particularly in areas not far distant from where [the Kansas City Missouri Temple] stands. Over 170 years have passed since those difficult days,” said President Monson after arriving in Kansas City for the dedication. “Feelings have softened.”

With President Monson at the dedication were Elder Jeffrey R. Holland of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, Elder Donald L. Hallstrom of the Presidency of the Seventy, and Elder William R. Walker, executive director of the Church’s Temple Department.[12]Gerry Avant, “Kansas City Missouri Temple dedicated by President Thomas S. Monson,” Church News 5 May 2012, 7 Jul. 2012 <http://www.ldschurchnews.com/articles/62320/Kansas-City-Missouri-Temple-dedicated-by-President-Thomas-S-Monson.html>.

DEDICATION ORDER
137

Date2012 05 06
ByThomas S. Monson
RolePresident
Sessions3
Attendees#

⮜Preceded by Quetzaltenango Guatemala
Followed by Manaus Brazil

Dedicatory Prayer

Construction Duration

SpanDuration
Announced
to
Groundbreaking
1 y,
7 m,
4 d
Groundbreaking
to
Dedication
1 y,
11 m,
29 d
Announced
to
Dedication
3 y,
7 m,
15 d

Dedicatory Order

GLOBAL

137

REGION
N. AM
90

COUNTRY
US
65

STATE
MISSOURI
2

COUNTY
CLAY
1

CITY
KANSAS CITY
1

Presidents and Matrons

Temple PresidentTemple MatronYears Served
Creed Richard JonesRenel Bloomquist Jones2024–2024
Richard Scott HolmanKelli Schiess Holman2021–2024
Wayne Keith MillerLoralee Priday Miller2018–2021
Dennis Hanks KarpowitzDorothy Diane Carpenter Karpowitz2015–2018
John White HardyNancy Hatch Savage Hardy2011–2015

Details

Location

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Site

Location

address

Latitude#
Longitude#

Phone

phone

Elevation

FeetMeters
875267

Site

AcresHectares
8.053.3

Exterior

Cladding

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Water Course
Windows

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Spandrel panel

Exterior Finish

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Architectural Features

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FeetMeters
Height##
To Shoulder##
Width##
Length##
Footprint##
HeadingCalc

Symbolism

Inscription

text

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Order
Location
Language
Type
Color
Setting
Font
Glyph
Church Name
Temple Name
Dates
Cornerstone

text

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Location
Faces
Material
Set
Edge
Type
Finish
Language

Spires and Finial

Spires

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Spire Details

Spires2
LocationEast, West Center
FinishPrecast Concrete
TypeSteeple
shapeSquare
Tower shapeSquare
Moroni

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Sculptor:Karl Quilter
Commissioned:1978
Completed:1985
Material:Fiberglass
Height:10 ft (3.2 m)
Weight:~400 lbs (136.1 kg)
Currently On:51 temples
Finish:
Placed:
Faces:

Interior

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Entry

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Area32,000 f2
(2,973 m2)
Floors above grade2
Floors below Grade1
Baptistries1
Initiatories
Endowment Rooms2
Sealing Rooms2
Baptistry

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Baptistries:
Location:
Exterior Windows:
Artwork:
Artwork Type:
Oxen:
Type:
Hoof:
Color:
Layout:
Font Exterior:
Interior:
Shape:
Bowl Shape:
Pillar:
Stairs:
Font Well:
Initiatory Spaces

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Style
Type
Rooms
*Estimated
Instruction Rooms

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Creation Room

text-images

Garden Room

text-images

World Room

text-images

Terrestrial Room

text-images

Rooms2
TypeProgressive
Capacity#
Muralsn
Total Muraled Rooms0
Mural Type
*Estimated
Celestial Room

text-images

Sealing Room

text-images

Sealing Rooms3
Largest Capacity

Contractors

Architect

[with additional version]

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Projects by Architect

Project Manager

[without additional version]

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General Contractor

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Other Contractor

contractor and position

Region

Alabama2Birmingham · Huntsville
Alaska2Anchorage · Fairbanks
Arizona9Flagstaff · Gilbert · Mesa · Phoenix · Queen Creek · Snowflake · The Gila Valley · Tucson · Yuma
Arkansas1Bentonville
California12Bakersfield · Feather River · Fresno · Los Angeles · Modesto · Newport · Oakland · Redlands · Sacramento · San Diego · San Jose · Yorba Linda
Colorado4Colorado Springs · Denver · Fort Collins · Grand Junction
Connecticut1Hartford
Florida5Fort Lauderdale · Jacksonville · Orlando · Tallahassee · Tampa
Georgia1Atlanta
Hawaii4Honolulu · Kahului · Kona · Laie
Idaho11Boise · Burley · Caldwell · Coeur d’Alene · Idaho Falls · Meridian · Montpelier · Pocatello · Rexburg · Teton River · Twin Falls
Illinois2Chicago · Nauvoo
Indiana1Indianapolis
Iowa1Des Moines
Kansas1Wichita
Kentucky1Louisville
Louisiana1Baton Rouge
Maine1Portland
Maryland1Washington D.C.
Massachusetts1Boston
Michigan2Detroit · Grand Rapids
Minnesota1St. Paul
Missouri3Kansas City · Springfield · St. Louis
Montana3Billings · Helena · Missoula
Nebraska1Winter Quarters
Nevada4Elko · Las Vegas · Lone Mountain · Reno
New Jersey1Summit
New Mexico2Albuquerque · Farmington
New York2Manhattan · Palmyra
North Carolina2Charlotte · Raleigh
North Dakota1Bismarck
Ohio3Cincinnati · Cleveland · Columbus
Oklahoma2Oklahoma City · Tulsa
Oregon3Medford · Portland · Willamette Valley
Pennsylvania3Harrisburg · Philadelphia · Pittsburgh
South Carolina1Columbia · Greenville
South Dakota1Rapid City
Tennessee3Knoxville · Memphis · Nashville
Texas10Austin · Dallas · El Paso · Fort Worth · Houston South · Houston · Lubbock · McAllen · McKinney · San Antonio
Utah32Bountiful · Brigham City · Cedar City · Deseret Peak · Draper · Ephraim · Heber Valley · Jordan River · Layton · Lehi · Lindon · Logan · Manti · Monticello · Mount Timpanogos · Ogden · Oquirrh Mountain · Orem · Payson · Price · Provo Rock Canyon · Provo City Center · Red Cliffs · Salt Lake · Saratoga Springs · St. George · · Smithfield · Spanish Fork · Syracuse · Taylorsville · Vernal · West Jordan
Virginia4Norfolk · Richmond · Roanoke · Winchester
Washington6Columbia River · Moses Lake · Seattle · Spokane · Tacoma · Vancouver
Wisconsin1Milwaukee
Wyoming3Casper · Cody · Star Valley
Canada11Calgary · Cardston · Edmonton · Halifax · Lethbridge · Montreal · Regina · Toronto · Vancouver · Victoria · Winnipeg
Costa Rica1San José
Dominican Republic1Santiago · Santo Domingo
El Salvador1San Salvador · Santa Ana
Guatemala6Cobán · Guatemala City · Huehuetenango · Miraflores Monterrey · Guatemala City · Quetzaltenango · Retalhuleu
Haiti1Port-au-Prince ·
Honduras2Tegucigalpa · San Pedro Sula
Mexico27Cancún · Chihuahua · Ciudad Juárez · Colonia Juárez · Cuernavaca · Culiacan · Guadalajara · Hermosillo Sonora · Juchitán de Zaragoza · Merida · Mexico City Benemerito · Mexico City · Monterrey · Oaxaca · Pachuca · Puebla · Querétaro · Reynosa · San Luis Potosi · Tampico · Tijuana · Toluca · Torreon · Tula · Tuxtla Gutierrez · Veracruz · Villahermosa
Nicaragua1Managua
Panama1Panama City
Puerto Rico1San Juan
United States158Albuquerque · Anchorage · Atlanta · Austin · Bakersfield · Baton Rouge · Bentonville · Billings · Birmingham · Bismarck · Boise · Boston · Bountiful · Brigham City · Burley · Caldwell · Casper · Cedar City · Charlotte · Chicago · Cincinnati · Cleveland · Cody · Coeur d’Alene · Colorado Springs · Columbia · Columbia River · Columbus · Dallas · Denver · Des Moines · Deseret Peak · Detroit · Draper · El Paso · Elko · Ephraim · Fairbanks · Fairview · Farmington · Feather River · Flagstaff · Fort Collins · Fort Lauderdale · Fort Worth · Fresno · The Gila Valley · Gilbert · Grand Junction · Grand Rapids · Greenville · Harrisburg · Hartford · Heber Valley · Helena · Honolulu · Houston South · Houston · Huntsville · Idaho Falls · Indianapolis · Jacksonville · Jordan River · Kahului · Kansas City · Knoxville · Kona · Laie · Las Vegas · Layton · Lehi · Lindon · Logan · Lone Mountain · Los Angeles · Louisville · Lubbock · Manhattan · Manti · McAllen · Medford · Memphis · Meridian · Mesa · Milwaukee · Missoula · Modesto · Monticello · Montpelier · Moses Lake · Mount Timpanogos · Nashville · Nauvoo · Newport · Norfolk · Oakland · Ogden · Oklahoma City · Oquirrh Mountain · Orem · Orlando · Palmyra · Payson · Philadelphia · Phoenix · Pittsburgh · Pocatello · Portland M · Portland O · Price · Provo City Center · Provo Rock Canyon · Queen Creek · Raleigh · Rapid City · Red Cliffs · Redlands · Reno · Rexburg · Richmond · Roanoke · Sacramento · Salt Lake · San Antonio · San Diego · San Jose · Saratoga Springs · Seattle · Smithfield · Snowflake · Spanish Fork · Spokane · Springfield · St. George · St. Louis · St. Paul · Star Valley · Summit · Syracuse · Tacoma · Tallahassee · Tampa · Taylorsville · Teton River · Tucson · Tulsa · Twin Falls · Vancouver · Vernal · Washington D.C. · West Jordan · Wichita · Willamette Valley · Winchester · Winter Quarters · Yorba Linda · Yuma

Sources and Citations

References

References
1 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints News Release, “Temple Announced for Greater Kansas City Area,” 4 Oct. 2008.
2 Reports from numerous members in the Kansas City area.
3 “JE Dunn will build LDS temple in Kansas City,” Kansas City Business Journal 3 Feb. 2009, 3 Feb. 2009 http://www.bizjournals.com/kansascity/stories/2009/02/02/daily28.html.
4 Virginia Walsh, City Planning and Development Department, Memorandum on Plats Review Committee Meeting – Wednesday – May 20, 2009, 13 May 2009, 27 Jul. 2009 http://www.kcmo.org/planning/devmgmt/PRC_agendas/2009/5-20-09.pdf.
5 “City Plan Commission Docket,” City of Kansas City, Missouri 2 Jun. 2009, 27 Jul. 2009 http://www.kcmo.org/planning/devmgmt/CPC/2009%20Dockets/06-02-09%20CPC%20Docket.pdf.
6 “Fact Sheet: Case Nos. 405-S-40, 11265-P-1 and 11265-CUP-2,” City of Kansas City, Missouri 2 Jul. 2009, 27 Jul. 2009 http://cityclerk.kcmo.org/liveweb/Documents/ViewAttachment.aspx?q=3xGy6Gmgrg4uZXBXaYrq2emqx%2F8YLaQ9yte1PgdH4PyrdESBdO8uJBtLGgbvMLjXN4TwsV6cOuPuWov9w%2B5XntG3JPYL%2F5YQ
7 “Kansas City Council Record,” City of Kansas City, Missouri 30 Jul. 2009, 13 Aug. 2009 <http://cityclerk.kcmo.org/liveweb/Meetings/CouncilMinutes.aspx?
8 “City Plan Commission Docket,” City of Kansas City, Missouri 18 Aug. 2009, 13 Aug. 2009 http://www.kcmo.org/planning/devmgmt/CPC/2009%20Dockets/08-18-09%20CPC%20Docket.pdf.
9 “Kansas City Council Record,” City of Kansas City, Missouri 22 Oct. 2009, 22 Oct. 2009 <http://cityclerk.kcmo.org/LiveWeb/Meetings/CouncilMinutes.aspx?
10 “Project Detail,” City of Kansas City, Missouri 6 Mar. 2010 http://kivaweb.kcmo.org/kivanet/2/project/index.cfm?fa=dspjdtl&project;=CR201010837&jur;=KCMO.
11 Gerry Avant, “Kansas City Missouri Temple: ‘The reason for this great celebration,'” Church News 5 May 2012, 7 Jul. 2012 <http://www.ldschurchnews.com/articles/62319/Kansas-City-Missouri-Temple-The-reason-for-this-great-celebration.html>.
12 Gerry Avant, “Kansas City Missouri Temple dedicated by President Thomas S. Monson,” Church News 5 May 2012, 7 Jul. 2012 <http://www.ldschurchnews.com/articles/62320/Kansas-City-Missouri-Temple-dedicated-by-President-Thomas-S-Monson.html>.

Last updated on: 30 September 2025