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Bloch Cancer Survivors' Park

CancerParkCaseyLocation:
The park is located between 47th St. and 48th St., on the east side of Roanoke Parkway. It is just west of the Country Club Plaza.

Ornamental Structures:

The park contains many symbolic figures that depict a positive attitude toward the fight against cancer.

TransformedFlower

"Transformed Flower" is  a beautiful combination of art and architecture by Phillip K Smith III of the Indiobased design studio The Art Office. The artwork, which was installed in May 2008, looks colorful and interesting as the sculpture rises from a circle at the base to an eight-pointed star at the top.





CancerHope
The bronze sculpture, "Cancer... There’s Hope," features three people gleefully escaping five arches that represent the maze that is cancer. Further back, are others that represent those who have been diagnosed with cancer and their loved ones about to enter the five arches of the maze of cancer. There is worry of what the future may entail on their faces as they enter the maze.




History:

Richard Bloch was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer in 1978, but he wasn’t about to accept this fate.

Instead, he stayed positive and fought back through aggressive treatments and the support of family and friends.

Two years later, the cancer disappeared.

Bloch, co-founder of H&R Block tax services, and his wife Annette Modell Bloch, decided to devote their time and money to help others diagnosed with cancer obtain information about the disease and receive support during the difficult time. And so began the R.A. Bloch Cancer Foundation in 1980.

In 1990, the first Richard and Annette Bloch Cancer Survivors Park opened in the park previously known as Roanoke Plaza, just west of the Country Club Plaza. The park is dedicated to cancer survivors.

In 2009, the Cancer Survivors Park in Kansas City won a Merit Award for Design by the Central States Region of the American Society of Landscape Architects. Currently, there are 24 Richard and Annette Bloch Cancer Survivor Parks throughout the United States and Canada with different designs but similar themes. 

Richard Adolph Bloch was born in Kansas City in 1926. After graduating from the Wharton School of Finance in Economics in Philadelphia, he married Annette Modell. Bloch returned to Kansas City and worked in the municipal bond business and as a retail jewelry efficiency expert. He decided to join his brothers Henry and Leon in their small bookkeeping business in 1953. After Leon left the business, Henry and Richard changed the business’ name to H & R Block. In 1955 they ran a small advertisement “Taxes, $5.” Their tax preparation business quickly took off and rapidly grew. 

Along with starting the R. A. Bloch Cancer Foundation, Mr. Bloch also created the Cancer Hotline, a free telephone service where people can call in for information about cancer and talk with a volunteer who has had cancer in the past or is currently battling the disease. In 1982, he was appointed to the National Cancer Advisory Board and was on the National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship. Richard Bloch died in 2004 of heart failure. Annette Bloch continues to do philanthropic work. 


Photo by Ryan Casey, Ryan Casey Photography



    
 
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