YOUR BUSINESS AUTHORITY
Springfield, MO
Owner: Bapa Network LLC
General contractor: BP Builders LLC
Architect: Clarkitecture LLC (Wichita, Kansas)
Engineers: MKEC Engineering Inc. (Wichita, Kansas), structural; Anderson Engineering Inc., civil; and BC Engineers Inc. (Shawnee, Kansas), mechanical, electrical and plumbing
Size: 900 square feet
Estimated cost: WND
Lender: Guaranty Bank
Estimated completion: April
Project description: Dunkin’ will soon have a second Springfield location with the opening of a restaurant in Old Town Shopping Center. The idea is to reduce some of the pressure on the other Springfield Dunkin’, which is farther south at 4020 S. Campbell Ave., according to franchisee Girish Patel of Bapa Network LLC, who said the restaurant will employ 30 people. Dunkin’ is as known for its coffee as it is for its doughnuts, and the new location will be a drive-thru concept with two separate lanes that merge to the same pickup point, according to project architect Chris Clark. It’s a new nationwide prototype for Dunkin’, Clark said, adding the concept was made popular by McDonald’s. “They can get more orders into the queue at once, and then they can be working on those in the kitchen. It expedites the whole process,” Clark said. There will also be a walk-up window for customers. Patel also offered an update on another Bapa project: After a six-month delay in the city permitting process, work has begun on a combined Dunkin’ and Baskin Robbins at 1614 S. Glenstone Ave., the site of the former Krave Seafood & Oyster Bar.
Logistics company Premier Truck Group is building a new truck sales and repair facility in Strafford, using precast contract, metal framing, thermoplastic polyolefin roofing and standing-seam metal in its construction.
Senior partner at New York Life Insurance Co. dies
O'Reilly Automotive board approves 15-for-1 stock split
The Wheelhouse plans move downtown
STL hospital surrenders state license
TLC Properties loses Edgewood REIT management contract
Ben & Jerry’s accuses parent company of removing CEO over political posts