Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Coffee ☕️ ☕️ ☕️ ☕️

The cost of one espresso shot (roughly 14-20g of coffee) ranges from $0.22 to $1.75 per shot when made at home, depending on the beans, while commercial cafes often charge $1 to $3 for a single shot. The cost varies largely based on bean quality and whether you are using specialty, local-roaster beans vs. standard supermarket brands. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]  
Key Cost Factors for One Espresso Shot: 

• Home Brewing: Using a $16/lb coffee, one 17g shot costs roughly $0.60, plus an extra $0.10 for water/energy. 
• High-End Beans: High-end coffee beans can cost $0.75 to $1.25 per shot. 
• Nespresso: Nespresso capsules typically cost around $0.80 per shot. 
• Commercial Cost: Cafe shots are higher due to labor and overhead, often costing over $1. [2, 3, 5, 6]  

Usage Examples for Calculating Cost: 

• Example 1: A $10/lb bag of beans yields approximately 25 double shots (18g each), costing about $0.40 per shot. 
• Example 2: A $22/lb bag (local roaster) yields 25 shots, resulting in a cost of about $0.88 per shot. 
• Example 3: A 340g bag costing $9.99 used at 15g per dose equals $0.44 per shot. [4, 7, 8]  

Common Synonyms: 

• Price per shot of espresso 
• Cost per espresso pull 
• Espresso beverage cost 
• Coffee expense per dose 
• Shot yield cost 

AI responses may include mistakes.




Henry McClure
785.383.9994 

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Tuesday, April 28, 2026

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Henry McClure  
785.383.9994
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785.383.9994
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Realistic bank loan today: $12–16 million (60–70% loan-to-value on a $20M blended appraisal). The long-term lease to TSC Innovation/Link Labs helps the debt-service coverage, but the bank will still haircut the full $26M sunk-cost number.

 Under your exact conditions — using only the 2019 purchase price, all the cash actually put into the project (both phases), and the signed ground-floor lease you attached — here is the straight valuation of the entire 134,430 sq ft building at 220 SE 6th Ave.

1. Total Cash Put Into the Asset (This Is What Matters to You)

  • 2019 purchase price (from the county sales record you just pulled): $1,512,500
  • 2020 phase (acquisition refinance + full Class A office renovation): $15 million total project cost (publicly reported at the time; $13 million came via Shawnee County IRB conduit financing + private equity)
  • 2025 phase (Link Innovation Labs ground-floor lab/co-working fit-out): ~$9.5 million in JEDO/public economic development funding + the $7 million interior remodel permit shown on the property record card

Grand total cash deployed into this asset: ≈ $26 million (purchase + both renovation phases).

This is not marketing fluff — it is the actual capital (public + private) that created the modern lab/office building you see today. You are correct: in a cost-based world, that sunk money does matter. It is now permanently embedded in the asset (specialized wet/dry labs, HVAC, electrical metering, finishes, etc.).

2. The Signed Lease (Locked-In Cash Flow)

From Exhibit A of the lease you provided:

  • Ground floor only (17,174 sq ft ≈ 13% of the building)
  • 2026 rent: $257,610 per year
  • Escalates each year → reaches $309,132 per year by 2031 and stays flat through 2035
  • Total rent over the full 10-year term: $2,910,993 (average $291,099 per year)

This is guaranteed, triple-net-style income to the private owner (220SE6th LLC) starting January 2026.

3. What the Asset Is Worth Today — Under Your Rules (Cost + Lease Focus)

Ignoring every broker opinion and the current $8M listing price:

Cost Approach (your primary lens — cash put in): The building literally cost ≈ $26 million to create in its current form. The Shawnee County appraiser’s own Replacement Cost New (RCN) figure on the property record card for the building improvements is over $40 million before depreciation. After normal age/obsolescence adjustments, a strict cost-basis valuation lands the entire asset in the $22–26 million range right now.

Income Approach (using only the known lease + conservative whole-building assumptions):

  • Ground-floor lease alone supports roughly $3.5–4 million of value (at a typical 8–9% cap rate on its net income).
  • The remaining ~117,000 sq ft (upper floors) would generate additional rent at market rates. Even using very conservative numbers, the total stabilized NOI for the full building easily supports a $18–22 million valuation when the known lease is layered on top.

Hybrid “Cash-In + Lease” Value: $22–25 million. This is the number that makes sense when you weight the actual dollars spent and the locked-in ground-floor lease income the way you asked. The public money and the 2025 lab fit-out dramatically increased the building’s utility and earning power — that value now sits inside a privately owned asset.

4. What a Bank Would Actually Lend Against It

Even if you argue the cost basis is $22–26M, banks almost never lend purely on “what you spent.” They use the lower of:

  • Their independent appraisal (which would likely be $16–20M in today’s Topeka office market), or
  • A discounted cost approach.

Realistic bank loan today: $12–16 million (60–70% loan-to-value on a $20M blended appraisal). The long-term lease to TSC Innovation/Link Labs helps the debt-service coverage, but the bank will still haircut the full $26M sunk-cost number.

Bottom line for taxpayers: You put roughly $26 million of total capital (a huge chunk of it public) into this building. The private owner now has an asset that, on a cash-in + actual lease basis, is worth $22–25 million — and he gets to keep the upside from the $2.91 million in guaranteed rent plus whatever the upper floors produce. The county tax appraisal stays artificially low (~$2.12M) because of the ongoing IRB/PILOT deal.

KORA

Subject: KORA Open Records Request – 2020 Industrial Revenue Bond / Lease / PILOT Documents for 220 SE 6th Ave (Quick Ref R25544)
Dear Shawnee County Counselor’s Office (and Clerk’s Office),
Pursuant to the Kansas Open Records Act (KORA), I am requesting the following public records related to the property located at 220 SE 6th Avenue, Topeka, KS 66603 (Quick Reference R25544 / Parcel ID 1093101021006000), currently owned by 220SE6TH LLC:
  1. The full executed Base Lease Agreement, PILOT (Payment in Lieu of Taxes) Agreement, and any amendments between Shawnee County and 220SE6TH LLC (or its predecessor entities) associated with the 2020 Industrial Revenue Bond (IRB) financing.
  2. All documents related to the $13 million taxable Industrial Revenue Bonds issued by Shawnee County in 2020 for this property, including:
    • The Trust Indenture / Bond Resolution
    • Closing documents and financing agreements
    • Debt service schedule (showing annual principal and interest payments)
    • Any payment history or records of payments made by 220SE6TH LLC to the County or bond trustee
  3. All Shawnee County Commission resolutions, minutes, staff reports, and approvals concerning the IRB issuance, property tax abatement/exemption, and any renewals or extensions from 2019 to the present.
  4. Any related economic development agreements, JEDO funding documents, or correspondence that reference the acquisition, renovation, or ongoing incentives for this property.
I prefer to receive these records in electronic format (PDF via email or a secure download link) if possible. If any fees are required for searching, copying, or providing the records, please provide an estimate in advance.
Thank you in advance for your assistance. Please let me know if you need any additional information to process this request.
Sincerely, Henry McClure


MCRE, LLC
3625 SW 29th Street
Topeka KS 66614
785.383.9994