I wanted to write up a review on the βnewβ Frisco Train Store in Valley Park today. Itβs so totally awesome and if your kids (or grandkids) are into trains you HAVE to come see it.
But then I was thinkingβ¦if you, kind reader, havenβt been to the old store, you wonβt understand why Iβm gushing with joy over the Phoenix-like transformation of the Frisco. The Frisco Train Store is really an old store with a new name, new owner and new lease on life.
See, the Frisco used to be the location of the Whittle Shortline Railroad Toy Store. To put it kindly, the Whittle downsized rather suddenly and now only sells toys online. You can read about that mess here at the Riverfront Times.
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We were hooked.
Whittle outgrew Valley Parkβs workshop and built a factory in rural Missouri. They were selling bunches of toys online and things looked good.
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The Valley Park store was also locally popular with at-home moms due to a 15-foot train table in the store where kids were invited the kids to play their hearts out. My oldest was one of those early engineers (heβs 14 now) and we had many a fun afternoon at Whittle.
By Christmas break 2012 I had given up on Whittle. I figured that Mitch would be outgrowing wooden trains pretty soon and wouldnβt have time to visit when he started elementary school. I vowed to never come backβthe company seemed more interested in selling their goods online than to local parents.
According to the RFT, Whittle Shortline Railroad suffered many financial setbacks, starting with a flood in 2008 that ruined their factory and shut down production. Thereβs more to the story, but this isnβt the place to tell it.
Whittle shut the doors on their Valley Park store last February and now only sells their toys online. The buildingβs owner didnβt want to be left with a vacant building in a prime location and started looking around for someone to reopen the store.
He didnβt have to look far.
Kristin Berry was the manager of the toy shop for years and was more than excited to give the place her own spin. There was little she could do as an employee to stop Whittleβs downward slide. But sheβs a mom of train loving boys and knew what worked with Whittleβs local customer baseβand what didnβt. She and her husband Tom took over the buildingβs lease, gathered their family and friends and set to work fixing up the place. By now it needed paint, plaster, plumbing repairs and a rail car full of TLC. They replaced the old battered train table with an even bigger set up and restocked the shelves with Brio, Thomas, Maple Landmark and Melissa and Doug. Sadly, they couldnβt come to an agreement with Whittle. You still have to go online to find their toys.
The shop was renamed βThe Frisco Train Storeβ after the history of the 19th century building it occupies, a former Frisco railroad hotel.
They reopened in April and things look back on track. Check out Friscoβs website here for more details or read my review.
