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Leeds, Kansas City

Kansas City, Missouri region geography stubsNeighborhoods in Kansas City, Missouri

Leeds is a neighborhood of Kansas City, Missouri, United States.A post office called Leeds was established in 1890, and remained in operation until 1929. The community's name is a transfer from Leeds, England.It used to be the site of a General Motors assembly plant from 1929-1988.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Leeds, Kansas City (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Leeds, Kansas City
East 38th Street, Kansas City

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 39.055838 ° E -94.508565 °
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Address

East 38th Street 6500
64129 Kansas City
Missouri, United States
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Kauffman Stadium
Kauffman Stadium

Kauffman Stadium (), often called "The K", is a baseball stadium located in Kansas City, Missouri. It is the ballpark to the Kansas City Royals of Major League Baseball (MLB). It is part of the Truman Sports Complex together with the adjacent Arrowhead Stadium, home of the Kansas City Chiefs of the National Football League (NFL). The stadium is named for Ewing Kauffman, the founder and first owner of the Royals. It opened in 1973 as Royals Stadium and was named for Kauffman twenty years later on July 2, 1993. Since its last major renovation in 2009, the listed seating capacity is 37,903. Kauffman Stadium was built specifically for baseball during an era when building multisport "cookie-cutter" stadiums was commonplace. It is often held up along with Dodger Stadium (1962) in Los Angeles as one of the best examples of modernist stadium design. It is currently the only stadium in the American League to be named after a person and is also one of eight stadiums in Major League Baseball that does not have a corporate-sponsored name. The stadium is the sixth-oldest stadium in the majors and has hosted the 1973 and the 2012 MLB All-Star Games, along with Royals home games during the 1980, 1985, 2014, and 2015 World Series. Between 2007 and 2009, Kauffman Stadium underwent a $250 million renovation, which included updates and upgrades in fan amenities, a new Royals hall of fame area, and other updates throughout the facility. In 2022, the Royals announced intentions to build and open a stadium in downtown Kansas City's East Village neighborhood or North Kansas City before the team's lease agreement with Jackson County expires at the end of the 2030 MLB season. A financial analysis of the new stadium plans estimates that the cost to taxpayers would be between $4.4 billion to $6.4 billion.