
When you think of Kansas City, certain things immediately come to mind: BBQ, jazz, the Royals, the Chiefs, and the always troubling question, โAre we talking about the Kansas City in Missouri or Kansas?โ Itโs doubtful that you have ever given much thought to what lies below the surface โ specifically, the massive underground city that exists in the Kansas City caves.
Ladies, gentlemen, and curious spelunkers of history, pull up a chairโpreferably one not made of limestoneโand letโs take a journey below the streets of Kansas City. Beneath the soil and concrete lies an entire parallel universe. Itโs a world of cavesโsome natural, but mostly man-madeโthat house businesses, workers, priceless treasures, and, yes, more refrigerated cheese than youโd think one city needs. Welcome to Kansas Cityโs subterranean empire: part history lesson, part engineering marvel, and part plotline for a dystopian sci-fi novel that somehow stars UPS trucks instead of zombies.
Contents
Geology 101: How Kansas City Caves Became Underground Real Estate

Kansas City isnโt just blessed with jazz and barbecue; it also sits on a treasure trove of limestone. Starting in the late 1800s, quarrying operations along the Missouri River carved out massive caverns. These werenโt the quaint, bat-filled caves of Boy Scout field trips. No stalactites or underground rivers hereโjust enormous, empty chambers where miners hauled out limestone for roads, bridges, and buildings. By the mid-20th century, KC was left with a honeycomb of underground voids big enough to make Tolkienโs dwarves jealous.
The thing about limestone caves is theyโre temperature-stable. Year-round, the underground climate hovers around 55โ65ยฐF. Thatโs free refrigeration courtesy of geology. No air-conditioning bills, no heating drama. Just constant coolness, like that one kid in high school who never seemed to sweat.
Fun fact: Kansas City has one of the largest collections of man-made limestone caves in the United States. Some locals like to say you could practically drive from one end of the city to the other without ever seeing daylightโthough youโd probably get lost and end up being discovered in a few hundred years by Indiana Jonesโ great-great-grandkid.
From Empty Holes to Cold Gold: The Birth of Underground Storage
By the 1940s and 1950s, people realized these giant caverns were too valuable to leave empty. Businesses began using them for storageโparticularly companies that wanted cheap refrigeration. Food distributors, breweries, and eventually the U.S. government all lined up to stash their stuff in Kansas Cityโs subterranean treasure chest. It turns out these caves were perfect for keeping perishables fresh and documents safe. Think of it as the worldโs most practical junk drawer, only a few hundred feet underground.
Early adopters included beer companies (because alcohol producers have a long history of going underground) and frozen-food distributors. During the Cold War, some caves were even eyed as potential fallout shelters. Nothing says โpost-apocalyptic chicโ like riding out nuclear winter surrounded by pallets of Salisbury steak and Schlitz.
Side note: thanks to the cavesโ climate, Twinkies could theoretically last forever here. Theyโre already immortal above ground, but underground theyโd probably become sentient and develop superpowers.
Underground Cities: More Than Just Storage
Then came the big transformation: the caves stopped being just storage and started beingโฆ cities. The most famous example is SubTropolis, developed by Hunt Midwest. SubTropolis isnโt just the largest underground business complex in the U.S.โitโs the largest in the world. Clocking in at over 55 million square feet, itโs so big that comparing it to skyscrapers feels unfair. You could fit 14 Empire State Buildings inside it, or 140 Arrowhead Stadiums if youโre more of a football fan.
SubTropolis has everything youโd expect in a cityโminus sunlight and Starbucks, but it is also free of the oppressive summer heat and humidity, so thereโs that. There are more than 1,600 people employed by over 50 companies in SubTropolis alone. Streets and signage guide the employees and visitors to their destinations. Add in the other complexes in the KC Metro area like Deanโs Downtown Underground, data storage titan Iron Mountain, Space Center in Leeโs Summit and Independence, Missouri, and Meritex in Lenexa, Kansas, and youโve got thousands of workers showing up every day, clocking in beneath the prairie. Kansas City is the only place where your daily commute might involve Waze telling you, โTurn right and then go straight down 160 feet before arriving at your destination.โ
All in all, Kansas Cityโs underground business adds up to about 10 percent of all the industrial space in the metro. Some accounts make it the top location in the world for the reuse of mined-out caverns.
Fun fact: the name โSubTropolisโ sounds like a knock-off comic book villainโs lair. Yet instead of Lex Luthor or Doctor Doom, youโll find storage facilities, logistics firms, and a UPS hub. Admittedly less dramatic, but arguably more powerful.
A Day in the Life Below Ground
So whatโs it like working in a cave? For starters, no snow days. No matter how bad the blizzard gets outside, SubTropolis stays a steady 65ยฐF. Forget scraping ice off your windshieldโworkers here barely need to check the weather. On the downside, you also never get to say, โSorry boss, roads were closed.โ Because the road underground is always open.

The businesses underground are surprisingly diverse. Logistics firms move millions of packages through the caves. Food distributors store cheese wheels and frozen goods. Data centers hum away quietly, taking advantage of the cool air. And the National Archives keeps historically priceless documents underground, where mold, fire, and humidity are less of a threat.
Estimates suggest 7,000โ10,000 people work underground in Kansas City daily. Thatโs about the size of a small Midwestern town. Except instead of a town square and mayorโs office, you have forklifts and freight trucks barreling past limestone pillars.
Fun fact: UPS operates a distribution hub in SubTropolis so large it could qualify as a small airport. In fact, packages sometimes move faster underground than commuters do on I-70 above.
Treasures in the Dark: Whatโs Stored Underground
If you think itโs just boxes of frozen corn dogs and cartons of eggs down there, think again. Kansas Cityโs caves are basically a cultural time capsule, part Costco, part Smithsonian, part post-apocalyptic Bond set.

- Hollywoodโs Vault: Original film reels, including Gone with the Wind and The Wizard of Oz, are stored in climate-controlled vaults. Dorothy may have left Kansas, but Kansas never let go of Dorothy.
- The National Archives: Millions of documents and microfilm reels sit underground, safe from fire, floods, and political interns who donโt understand filing systems.
- Cheese, Glorious Cheese: At any given moment, millions of pounds of cheese are aging peacefully underground. It smells less romantic than Hollywood film reels, but possibly more delicious.
- Corporate Data: Data centers thrive underground. Some of your cloud storageโphotos, emails, those memes you swore you deletedโis literally in a Kansas City cave.
- Vodka in a Cave: SD Strong Distilling turns out vodka proudly labeled โMade in a Cave.โ Itโs proof you donโt need vineyards in Napa when youโve got limestone cellars and a good still.
- Classroom in the Caverns: Park University even used the underground for nursing classes. Nothing prepares future nurses for their much-needed chill attitudes better than an always-cool cave.
- Automotive Row: Ford Motor Co. has stashed new cars underground for decades, while suppliers spray protective coatings on truck beds in a climate so stable you could age whiskey thereโwell, vodka, anyway, as we have already seen. Employees admit they prefer it to the above-ground heatโplus, itโs the only assembly line where you donโt have to worry about getting sunburn on your lunch break.
Of course, itโs not all movie reels and cheese wheels. The underground has seen its share of drama. In 1992, a fire at the AmeriCold facility in Kansas City, Kansas, burned and smoldered for four months, wiping out half a billion dollarsโ worth of food and paper records. The incident was a wake-up callโmost underground facilities now have sophisticated sprinkler systems, something that wasnโt required back then. More recently, in 2015, Park Universityโs McAfee Library had to relocate after a few chunks of ceiling decided gravity was non-negotiable. Nobody was hurt, but the caveโs โopen conceptโ design suddenly felt a little too open.
And if youโre wondering, yesโcell phones tend to go dark underground. Unless you can hitch a ride on someoneโs WiFi, youโll find yourself off the grid. For some people, thatโs a nightmare. For others, itโs the perfect excuse: โSorry, boss, I didnโt see your text. I was literally in a cave.โ
The IRS and โC-Siteโ: Tax Forms in a Cave
What does a cave have to do with taxes? Turns outโmore than youโd expect. Deep in Independence, Missouri, the IRS leases 26,000 square feet of a man-made cave complex known simply as โC-site.โ Thatโs where they store certain tax forms โ specifically those theyโre legally required to keep for 75 years.

Yes, this is not a metaphor. Weโre talking real boxes, real paper, deep underground. As of early 2024, there were something like 143 million pages packed into this cave-vault.
You might wonder why they donโt digitize all of those documents. Youโre not the first to ask that question. The most common answer is, โThatโs a tall order.โ It would require high-speed scanning (on the order of 14,000 pages an hour using five scanners) just to get through. In which case, it would take a total of 10,214 hours. Thatโs roughly 426 days if the scanners ran 24/7 or about 1,277 workdays if scanning only 8 hours a day. In other words, thatโs about five years of workdays. But this is the IRS weโre talking about, which is known for having speed and efficiency that ranks somewhere between a heavily sedated sloth and a damp dishcloth. Soโbasicallyโitโs never gonna happen.
Working Conditions: Not Always Sunshine and Rainbows
As you might imagine, the work environment in the area controlled by the IRS tends to come with its own environment of dysfunction. IRS employees working there have raised serious safety concerns. In August 2022, after reports of rocks falling, poor air quality, and other hazards, management shut the place down temporarily. When the site reopened, some improvements were madeโbut not everything was resolved. For instance, there was still a policy allegedly prohibiting employees from using a fire extinguisher in an emergency. Parking lots lacked protective covering to block falling debris. And yes, ladders that donโt meet safety standards are still used for retrieving boxes (some weighing up to 50 lbs.) from shelves as high as 13 feet. Three of the five IRS staffers there were reportedly on light duty due to workplace injuries.
Quirky Stories and Cultural Oddities
Kansas Cityโs caves arenโt just for work and storage. Over the years, theyโve played host to concerts, tours, and even film shoots. Some visitors describe it as stepping into a real-life Bond villainโs lair, albeit one with loading docks and employee break rooms.
There are rumorsโunconfirmed but too delightful not to mentionโthat some celebrity wine collections are aging quietly underground in KC. If true, that means while youโre eating barbecue above ground, a Hollywood starletโs cabernet is quietly reaching perfection beneath your feet.
During the Cold War, government agencies considered the caves for top-secret projects. The natural protection from blasts and the built-in refrigeration made them appealing. Ultimately, the caves stayed commercial instead of covertโbut the idea that Kansas City couldโve doubled as a Bond set piece is a fun โwhat if.โ
The Science of Efficiency
The caves arenโt just quirkyโtheyโre smart. Businesses underground save up to 70% on energy costs. Air-conditioning? Minimal. Heating? Who needs it. The earth takes care of climate control, and the energy savings make accountants downright giddy.
That eco-friendliness is part of why companies keep flocking to the underground. Lower carbon footprint, safer storage, and a certain novelty factor. Letโs face it: telling people your office is underground is way cooler than saying you telecommute from your bathroom.
Kansas Cityโs Subterranean Legacy
All told, the caves beneath Kansas City house millions of square feet of businesses and storage. Billions of dollarsโ worth of goods pass through every year. Entire cultural legaciesโHollywood films, government documentsโare safe thanks to the cityโs limestone underbelly. And every day, thousands of workers keep the lights (well, fluorescent tubes) running in this subterranean hive.
Most Kansas Citians walk through their days blissfully unaware that beneath them lies a parallel city. Itโs a place where Hollywood, history, and cheese peacefully coexist. Itโs practical, eccentric, and deeply Midwestern in its combination of ingenuity and โwhy not?โ
Conclusion: Kansas Cityโs Two Worlds
Kansas City has always been a city of variety: barbecue and jazz, fountains and freeways, prairie simplicity and metropolitan ambition. But perhaps its greatest contradiction is this: itโs a city defined as much by whatโs below as by whatโs above. The caves tell the story of a community that took empty holes in the ground and turned them into thriving businesses, storage vaults, and cultural sanctuaries.
So the next time you drive through Kansas City, remember: beneath your tires, there may be a UPS truck zipping through SubTropolis, a data server humming with your emails, or a Hollywood classic resting safely in the dark. Kansas City proves you donโt need to rely on skyscrapers alone to reach new heightsโyou can just dig down instead.
And if you ever get invited to tour the caves, say yes. Where else are you going to stand between Dorothyโs ruby slippers (well, the movie reels, anyway), copies of every tax return you ever filed, and a block of cheddar the size of a compact car?
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