Bella Patina
A three-story steel factory in the West Bottoms holds a treasure trove of antiques.
The first Friday of every month, a line of 100 visitors forms in Kansas City outside Bella Patina. Inside, visitors walk around with a pastry in hand and coffee close by, searching for that familiar thrill of finding something once loved and ready to be loved again. For three days each month, the doors open and the search shifts from curator to customer as blue-patterned china, vintage leather chairs, and frosted-glass apothecary cabinets await discovery.
In 2011, Megan and Nick Allen were newly married and furnishing their home on a tight budget, spending weekends sifting through antique stores in the West Bottoms. “We had been married a couple of years and didn’t have a lot of money,” Nick says. “We were just the type that would try to source stuff for our house because we couldn’t afford much.” Antiquing captured their heart, so the Allens, along with members of their family, opened their own antique store, Bella Patina. It opened in 2011 in the historic Kansas City Bolt and Nut Company warehouse.
What began with 5,000 square feet and seven vendors eventually became 25,000 square feet with over 60 vendors across three floors. As the business grew, Nick and Megan renovated the second and third floors of the warehouse while preserving its history. “Some spaces were more bare bones, versus other spaces, like our second floor, looked like a 1960s office space with dropped ceilings and fluorescent lights,” Nick explains. The couple brought the space back to life, exposing its original hardwood floors and wood beam ceilings. “It feels like a natural heir to do antiques inside of a building that itself feels like an antique,” Nick says.

The acclaim of Bella Patina grew until it reached the attention of a set designer for the film Oppenheimer (the story of the Manhattan Project set in the mid-1900s), who traveled from California to shop at Bella Patina. He brought back a standing chalkboard and two red leather chairs with nailhead trim. Oscar-winning actor Matt Damon can be seen sitting in one of the chairs in the film.
Through wooden stairways lit with vintage fixtures, visitors can browse antiques and discover pop-up food vendors. On the third floor, the Painted Rooster restaurant is run by a local family that offers made-from-scratch food. The warehouse’s original elevator is still in operation and transports large pieces of furniture and handicapped visitors to the building’s upper floors.
What makes Bella Patina shine goes beyond its gold-framed artwork and antique crystal. It’s the vision Nick and Megan share for the business. Nick and Megan continue to operate with a network of vendors who help shape and run the space, rather than hiring traditional employees.
Unlike a traditional, sleepy antique mall with divided booths, the Allens have created a harmonious, always-shifting store: a space that feels like stepping into a beautifully layered vintage home. Though creating this unique store is a fun experience, the Allens say the best part of the business is connecting with one another: as a family, with their customers, and with vendors. “Upscaling antiques is the business,” Nick says. “But more than that, we love that people come, that people love what we’ve created that much.”
• 1320 West 12th Street, Kansas City • BellaPatinaKC.com
All photos by Sydney Jones.
This article was orginally printed in the May 2026 issue of Missouri Life.



