Kim Blickenstaff, the California businessman turned local developer who drew a crowd to his December announcement of three major projects in Peoria Heights, has purchased two more high-profile commercial properties in the Village.
Not Just Any Developer
This healthcare entrepreneur—equal parts free-market throwback and can-do visionary—is putting his money where his mouth is. For starters, the Betty Jayne Brimmer Center for the Performing Arts—the former Kelly Avenue Library—had its grand opening on February 2, 2019, with an eight-band concert that doubled as a fundraiser for local music education efforts. It was a kickoff true to what Blickenstaff foresees as the facility’s mission.
“I knew it was going to work as a community center” when he first planted eyes on it, he says. He envisions regular concerts, dinner theater, film presentations, soapbox lecture events, karaoke nights, etc.—a cultural gathering place, inside and out, when the weather is accommodating.
Peoria Heights lofts, hotel and arts center planned by returning California businessman
A California-based businessman is returning to his roots with an imaginative, ambitious proposal that would remake the village of Peoria Heights.
Born and raised in Spring Bay, Kim Blickenstaff, 66, of San Diego, announced Friday his plans to turn the old Kelly Avenue Library, 137 E. Kelly Ave., into a performing arts center, a downtown office complex at 4617 N. Prospect Road into a 55-room boutique hotel and the former Grayboy Motorsports block at 4300 block of Prospect into loft-style homes and shops and restaurants.



