




Sixty feet above the Kansas River, the Rock Island Bridge, a 121-year-old steel structure, unused since the 1970s, reopened to the public this spring as a restaurant, bar, event hall, and trailhead. The bridge connects the West Bottoms in Kansas City, Missouri, to the Armourdale neighborhood in Kansas City, Kansas, with landings in both states. Its developer, the startup Flying Truss, calls it the first entertainment district built on a bridge over a river. The project has drawn repeated comparisons to New York’s High Line, whose reuse network the bridge joined in 2023.

The American Bridge Company built the crossing in 1905 from Carnegie steel for the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad, which used it to move livestock to the West Bottoms stockyards. Its three truss spans, two original and a third added in 1921, run roughly 700 feet. Rail service ended in the 1970s, and the structure sat unused for about half a century.

That long dormancy preserved it. Because the bridge never carried cars, it was never salted against snow, and engineers from Thornton Tomasetti & TranSystems found the steel in sound condition. Architecture firm Multistudio used that as its starting point, widening the deck with structural steel and enclosing a 35-foot-tall event hall dubbed the American Royal Hall in polycarbonate panels that frame the original trusses.
“Walking onto these old bridges is like walking into a gothic cathedral,” Multistudio principal Dennis Strait said.


The finished venue spans two levels and roughly 35,000 square feet. It can accommodate seating for more than 300 and a capacity of up to 1,500 people. The main deck holds River House, a restaurant from chef Bradley Gilmore, a walk-up window called Rock Island Eats, and a public trail; the upper deck holds American Royal Hall and a second bar. To meet modern levee standards, crews raised the bridge 4 feet using its original 1951 screw-lift gates.

The $20 million project drew public, private, and philanthropic funding. The Unified Government of Wyandotte County bought the bridge from Kansas City, Missouri, for $1 in 2022 and leased it long-term to Flying Truss. Michael Zeller, a former PBS executive, backed the redevelopment early on. He first leased the structure in 2018 after years of pitching the idea, and has projected 500,000 to 700,000 visitors a year.
The bridge is free to enter and cross, and it is designated a trailhead for the planned Greenline KC loop. The reopening also lands in a World Cup summer. With Kansas City among the tournament’s host cities, the venue has added ten screens in American Royal Hall for match viewing. A western entrance connecting to the Kansas levee trails is expected by late summer, with the full network due in spring 2027.
