Areas We Serve · Kansas City, Missouri
Brookside was already the heart of Kansas City four years before the Country Club Plaza opened. Specifically, J.C. Nichols broke ground on the shops at 63rd and Brookside Boulevard in 1919, making this the city’s first suburban shopping district. Meanwhile, the homes that surround those shops are stitched together by alleys, the Henry Wiggins Trolley Track Trail, and a private school culture unlike anywhere else in the metro. Our crews show up knowing the rear-garage layouts on Armour Hills lots and the parade route on Wornall Road in March.
What Sets Brookside Apart
J.C. Nichols broke ground on the Brookside Shops at 63rd and Brookside Boulevard on September 1, 1919, four years before the Plaza opened in 1923. In fact, that makes Brookside the original suburban shopping district in Kansas City. Furthermore, the neighborhood that grew around those shops still feels like a village rather than a suburb, with 80 stores inside a walkable radius and the 6.6-mile Trolley Trail threading through the homes. Each of those realities reshapes how a Brookside move actually happens.
Most Brookside homes from the 1910s through the 1940s were built with rear-alley garages instead of front driveways. In particular, those alleys run behind the Armour Hills, Romanelli Gardens, and Crestwood blocks at widths that predate full-size moving trucks. For that reason, we send a 16-foot or 20-foot truck and stage the rest of the load on Brookside Boulevard or Wornall Road.
Brookside has the densest private and Catholic school footprint in the metro. Specifically, Visitation at 5141 Main, St. Peter's, Pembroke Hill, Académie Lafayette at 68th and Oak, and The Barstow School all create pickup and dropoff patterns on Wornall and Main that no Johnson County suburb has. In addition, the morning rush around Loose Park feeds the Country Club Plaza commute. We schedule load windows after 9 a.m. for that reason.
The Brookside Art Annual on the first weekend of May draws roughly 70,000 attendees and shuts down 63rd Street between Wornall and Main. Meanwhile, the St. Patrick's Warm-Up Parade on the Saturday before St. Patrick's Day closes that same corridor, plus Meyer Boulevard and Brookside Road. For that reason, we map move dates around the published Brookside Business Association calendar.
Our Process
A Brookside move tends to land in one of three patterns. For example, a Visitation family moving from a 1925 Tudor in Armour Hills into a larger Romanelli Gardens home. Other times, an empty-nester downsizing from a 1920s Crestwood Cape Cod into a Brookside East loft conversion. And sometimes, a UMKC professor or Country Club Plaza professional buying their first Wornall Homestead bungalow. Here is how we work through each.
Specifically, we check whether the property has a rear-alley garage off Holmes, Charlotte, or Oak, or a front-street setup along Brookside Boulevard. In addition, we confirm whether the block sits inside Armour Hills, Romanelli Gardens, Crestwood, or one of the Fletcher Cowhert blocks in Morningside Park. Both the truck size and the load plan adjust before we even confirm the date.
Brookside is layered with historic Homes Associations including Armour Hills HA, Crestwood HA, and Romanelli Gardens HA. In particular, each one has its own rules about dumpster placement, parking on the street, and noise hours. We pull the relevant guidelines at booking so the move day stays clean.
Most Brookside homes were built between 1910 and 1940 with original plaster walls and hand-laid hardwood floors. Specifically, the door frames in pre-war Tudors and Cape Cods often measure tighter than modern openings. For that reason, we bring extra wall blankets, narrow dollies, and felt floor runners cut for the original boards.
The Brookside Art Annual blocks 63rd Street the first weekend of May, the St. Patrick's Warm-Up Parade closes the same corridor in mid-March, and the all-organic Farmers' Market at 6425 Wornall Road runs Saturday mornings spring through fall. On top of that, KCMO winter ice events can shut Wornall Road for a day at a time. We coordinate every move date with the public Brookside calendar.
Once the load is in, we walk the origin property and the new home with you. In particular, we check rear-alley garages, basements, attics, and detached carriage houses common in the older Brookside lots. Nothing gets left behind.
Who Calls Us
Brookside is the rare Kansas City neighborhood where a UMKC professor, a private-school family, and a young professional buying their first 1920s bungalow all live on the same block. Furthermore, the proximity to the Plaza, Research Medical Center, and downtown KC means the customer mix runs wider than any of our Johnson County markets. Here are the six groups our Kansas City crew moves most often into and out of Brookside.
Professors and staff at the two campuses immediately north and east of the neighborhood.
Working professionals based at the Plaza, the Crossroads, or downtown KC ten minutes north.
Households moving for Visitation, St. Peter's, Pembroke Hill, Académie Lafayette, or St. Teresa's Academy boundaries.
Owners trading a Romanelli Gardens or Armour Hills Tudor for a Brookside East apartment or maintenance-free condo.
First-time buyers landing in Crestwood or Countryside bungalows and Cape Cods within their starter budget.
Doctors, nurses, and techs at the Research campus three miles south on 63rd Street.
Brookside Move Questions
Most Brookside homes built before 1940 sit on lots with rear-alley garages instead of front driveways. In particular, those alleys behind Armour Hills, Romanelli Gardens, and Crestwood were paved in the 1920s for Model T Fords. For that reason, we send a 16-foot or 20-foot truck for the load and stage the remaining items on Brookside Boulevard or Wornall Road. Furthermore, we walk the alley during the pre-move estimate to verify low branches, dumpsters, and any neighbor obstructions.
Brookside is officially inside Kansas City Public Schools District 33, but roughly a quarter of zone families use private or Catholic schools. Specifically, we work move days around Visitation at 5141 Main, St. Peter’s near Meyer and Rockhill, Académie Lafayette at 68th and Oak, Pembroke Hill, The Barstow School, and St. Teresa’s Academy in Countryside. In addition, we adjust load windows so the truck is not on Wornall Road during morning dropoff or afternoon pickup.
The Brookside St. Patrick’s Day Warm-Up Parade runs the Saturday before St. Patrick’s Day at 2 p.m. each year, drawing thousands of spectators. In particular, the route closes 65th and Wornall, Wornall to 63rd Street, 63rd Street to Main, Main to Meyer Boulevard, and Meyer back to Brookside Road from roughly noon until 5 p.m. For that reason, we offer Friday afternoon load windows or push the move to Sunday or the following week. We confirm the official route from the Brookside Business Association each January.
The Brookside Art Annual takes place the first weekend in May every year. Specifically, the 40th annual show in 2026 runs May 1 through May 3 with roughly 180 artists and 70,000 attendees. Furthermore, the show closes Brookside Boulevard between 63rd Street and 65th Street plus a portion of 63rd Street itself. As a result, we usually load on Friday afternoon or wait until Monday morning for that weekend.
Roughly 80 percent of Brookside homes were built between 1910 and 1940 in Tudor Revival, Cape Cod, Craftsman, or Bungalow styles. In particular, original plaster walls show every dolly nick, and hand-laid white oak floors mark easily under modern furniture wheels. For that reason, we bring extra wall blankets, narrow dollies for the original door frames, and felt floor runners cut to the original board width. Notably, the Napoleon Dible signature Tudors in Armour Fields and Romanelli Gardens get the same protection standard as the highest-end estate moves.
Brookside sits right along State Line Road, so many residents move west into Prairie Village, Mission Hills, Westwood Hills, or Fairway. Specifically, that crossing means new Kansas license plates, voter registration, and Kansas income tax filings. Meanwhile, your Missouri property tax homestead exemption ends on closing day, and the Kansas equivalent has different filing windows. We work with your closing attorney to time the move so neither side gets caught with double payments.
Our Service Area
Brookside runs from 55th Street on the north down to Gregory Boulevard on the south, with Ward Parkway forming the western edge and Troost Avenue the eastern boundary. Within those edges we move every J.C. Nichols sub-neighborhood, including Crestwood near UMKC, Countryside east of Loose Park, Armour Hills along the Trolley Trail, Armour Fields between Wornall and Ward Parkway, Romanelli Gardens, Romanelli West, Wornall Homestead, Sunset Hill above Brush Creek, and the redeveloped Brookside East corridor. On top of that, we serve the Morningside Park blocks platted by Fletcher Cowhert, J.C. Nichols’ contemporary, between 59th and 62nd west of Oak. Our drivers know which Armour Hills alleys take a 20-foot truck and which require a smaller vehicle. Notably, we plan around the Brookside Business Association festival calendar, the UMKC academic schedule, and Loose Park event traffic.
Brookside Service Boundaries
ZIP code 64113 covers most of Brookside, with the southern edge extending into 64114. The service area runs from Ward Parkway on the west to Troost Avenue on the east. It also extends from 55th Street on the north down to Gregory Boulevard on the south.
Send us your Brookside address and the move date. In addition, mention the sub-neighborhood, the Homes Association, and whether your home has a rear-alley garage. Then we will scope the truck, the crew, and the load plan around what your Brookside property actually requires. We are America’s Favorite Local Movers, and our Kansas City team treats every 1920s Tudor and every Brookside East loft with the care the original district deserves.
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