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Tyler Irons Buys Champions Fun Center to reinvent it into a place for young people to discover their untapped potential

Tyler Irons Buys Champions Fun Center in Lincoln Nebraska
Tyler Irons Buys Champions Fun Center in Lincoln Nebraska
Champions Fun Center in Lincoln Nebraska being reinvented into a place for young people to discover their untapped potential

Champions Fun Center being reinvented into a place for young people to discover their untapped potential

 

by Margaret Reist  Updated 

 

Stanford Bradley Jr. looks for untapped potential.

In the kid at the emergency shelter who’s all wrapped up in Omaha’s gangs but knows he’s being given a chance and is trying to make it work.

In the young man at the detention center who needed a job and got one, then came every day to the auto detail shop Bradley and his dad own, got off probation and saved up enough money to buy a car.

In the story of hatching chicks, which Bradley cares much less about than the kid telling it, because he knows when he brings it up the next time they see each other that boy will know he means something to the grown-up with dreadlocks and the kind face.

 

And it’s what he sees in the 20,000 square feet of flashy arcade games and bowling lanes and empty birthday party rooms off Cornhusker Highway that was Champions Fun Center for the past two decades.

 

It has a new owner now — a Lincoln businessman named Tyler Irons, who saw potential there, too, as a home for the girls club basketball team he sponsors.

After Irons bought the building — and everything inside and out that drew kids there — he reached out to Bradley to help him turn it into a place for all kids.

 

“I see it in my head, how it’s going to work,” said Bradley, who named the youth advocacy nonprofit he started with his dad Untapped Potential. “I was so excited when Tyler reached out to me, when we started planning.”

Irons graduated from Lincoln East High School in 2007, joined the military, then dabbled in real estate and the car business after a medical discharge. He started a real estate tech company called VRLY in 2017.

About a year earlier he’d started something else: a girls basketball team that his then 5-year-old daughter Kaytee Irons, his niece and their friends asked if he’d sponsor. He did and both his business and the basketball organization took off.

 
 

“Then there were two teams, then four, then five,” he said. “You meet all these girls, you learn their stories, you get attached, then there’s more of them. It got to the point we felt we could have a bigger reach if we had bigger facilities.”

Then, by chance, one of his clients mentioned that Champions was for sale.

After he bought the building, Irons called everybody he could think of to help him get it off the ground, including Bradley, who he’d met years earlier when Bradley was coaching a small fry basketball team at the Salvation Army and asked if Irons’ daughter wanted to be on the team.

 

It’s still a work in progress, but Irons plans to remove the bowling alley and unearth the gym floor underneath for the basketball teams.

Tommy Johnson, who was just named girls basketball coach at North Star High, will continue as director of the VRLY Storm club.

Irons is in the process of getting the program approved so families can use child care subsidies for their children to buy a membership and attend an after-school program, and he hopes to continue to hold events there.

Bradley, who is associate director of team development at the Malone Center, will make it the base for his nonprofit work, help host events and create more programming.

 

“This is a big stage for all of us,” Bradley said. “It gives us a base.”

 

That base is already taking shape as Club LNK, which now offers teen nights. For $5 kids can play all the games and bowl — something many of them couldn’t afford to do when it was Champions.

Organizers enlisted the help of a University of Nebraska-Lincoln fraternity to build a giant haunted maze upstairs and hosted a Halloween event for kids.

 

Bradley and Irons are dreaming much bigger, though, envisioning a space for kids to come after school and do homework or get help from tutors, using the games and go-karts and putt-putt golf as incentives to make regular strides in an achievement zone.

When they started the teen nights, Bradley said he was surprised by how many of the kids had never been bowling.

“So now, after school, kids achieve their goals if they want to bowl for free,” he said. “They can earn points to be eligible for a pizza night — so we can make that connection.”

Making connections is key, Bradley said, the idea Untapped Potential is built on.

“Every kid isn’t going to have the same recipe for success,” he said. “It’s why it’s important to have individual responses for each kid.”

 
 

Bradley runs a program at the Malone Center to help foster good relationships with young people and the police; and through his nonprofit he works with young people at the detention center, helps parents understand their rights and advocate for their children who receive special-education services in school, and tries to make sure the organizations that are supposed to help kids are doing that.

“There’s a group of kids that look like me getting lost in the shuffle,” he said.

 

He knows they don’t get the services they should — he’s seen it with the kids he helps, and through his own experiences.

 

When he was 15 he was charged with several felonies. A juvenile court judge took a chance, letting him out on house arrest.

As soon as he got out he went to the Malone Center, began a job that turned into a passion, and changed the trajectory of his life.

He was barely monitored on probation, he said, though he’d been scared enough in detention that he was determined not to go back. 

His brother — just 10 months older — got in trouble, too, but needed more support. He didn’t get it, and ended up in prison.

 

What if someone had reached out, Bradley said, maybe tapped into his brother’s love of music, led him in a direction that resulted in better decisions?

“That’s why places like this are so important,” he said.

He hopes Club LNK can offer kids a safe place to hang out, around people who care and away from influences that fuel gun violence.

He sees what unconscious bias can do, like a call he got from a mom whose son was suspended for singing a rap song that adults in the room interpreted as threatening.

 
 

“The culture for people of color really isn’t present in a lot of places,” he said.

Sara Hoyle, Lancaster County Human Services Director, said Bradley offers that to kids.

“I think he brings lived experiences. He’s often the voice for youth. He’s young enough, he can still remember what it’s like,” she said. “He’s connected to the community we’re really trying to provide services to.”

Bradley wants to offer academic support and job fairs and a place to get to know the young people who walk through Club LNK’s doors.

 

“Sometimes they just need someone to invest their time,” Bradley said. “You get them to buy in by doing that. Then they’ll follow through.”

Irons said he wants space for his basketball program, but also to create a place for all kids — to expose them to ideas and hands-on, real-world opportunities they might not get in school. To help them understand how to succeed, to keep working at something they feel passionate about, to not be afraid to fail, to learn and push through and keep going.

 

They want to be a resource for other nonprofits that could use the meeting space they have, or want incentives for the kids they serve, to partner with them to do more for kids.

 

Right now, the teen nights are being run with volunteers — many of them from the Malone Center — and the men hope to build on that.

“I want to build that kind of relationship with the community,” Bradley said. “That’s what me, Tyler and Tommy envision going on here.”

Bradley believes there’s untapped potential in the community — people who can help but might not know how, some who are overlooked because they don’t have the education.

“I had to put in six years to get a seat at the table,” he said. He’s earning a degree online from Peru State, one class at a time. “If I waited till I got a college degree, I’d be 30.”

 
 

He wants to find those people — and help young people become leaders.

”I don’t just want to find those people, I want to make those people.”

He’s already started: bringing more than 200 young people to a Husker football game when the university offered free tickets, taking a group of kids to meet with the mayor to talk about what they wanted to see in a new police chief.

He saw what that did for those kids.

“If a kid gets that at 15, what are they going to be at 20?”

 

Bradley figures you either invest in young people now, or you’ll have to do it later — it’s why he, Irons and Johnson want to reinvent a longtime entertainment spot into something more.

“When you do good work, good things come.”

FULL ARTICLE AT JOURNAL STAR – 

 

  •  Updated 

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Real estate tech innovator Tyler Irons invests in new Youth Community Center in Lincoln

Real estate tech innovator Tyler Irons invests in new Youth Community Center in Lincoln

Nov 02, 2021 (AB Digital via COMTEX) —

Lincoln, Nebraska – November 02, 2021 – Tyler Irons, the founder, and CEO of leading real estate tech company VRLY, has recently invested in a new Youth Community Center in Lincoln, Nebraska. Titled “CLUB LNK”, the Youth Community Center is dedicated to empowering underserved kids by providing them access to a safe place and resources that will help them to succeed with nontraditional education.

A generous tech leader and entrepreneur, Tyler Irons has always believed in giving back to the community. Previously, he had sponsored a basketball club that grew into a basketball club with 500+ kids now. Titled VRLY Storm, the club will also practice out of the new facility in Lincoln.

In an exclusive interview, Mr. Irons shared that the new Youth Community Center is located in the heart of north Lincoln where the services are most needed. The facility was formerly a Family Fun Center Called Champions that was there for 20+ years but was closed down due to covid. 

“A facility like CLUB LNK was the need of the hour for the kids in Lincoln. I am glad I could be a part of such a great project that aspires to prepare kids and teens to grow up into transformative leaders for the common good”, stated Mr. Irons.

CLUB LNK is bringing industry leaders from across the city to provide the best of hands-on training and experiences for the members to prepare them for the future. The Youth Community Center extends a safe place to engage in various activities, including arts and crafts, mini-golf, arcade games, esports, basketball, and so on. Apart from learning activities, the facility will also host recreational events, like teen nights and organized activities. 

“CLUB LNK believes in community-driven experiential learning that will help the members to nurture their skills, attain scholarship, and achieve the passion to deal with pressing problems with high-impact approaches. The facility is dedicated to empower kids to grow up into successful, smart, and responsible individuals both on the professional and personal level through a non-conventional educational approach.”

A name of big repute in the real estate tech scene, Tyler Irons is a visionary American entrepreneur, real estate tech innovator, real estate marketing expert, speaker, and consultant. He founded the real estate technology software company VRLY with the mission to redefine technology and marketing for the future of real estate.  

VRLY is poised to take innovation a step further to help our real estate partners with a dramatic edge over their market. We are adding state-of-the-art features to our software such as custom 6D home tours, Near Field Communication technology, Lidar Scanner Depth Mapping, and more to elevate your real estate site and business to newer heights altogether. You will now be able to scale up your listings a step higher and unlock a new realm of possibilities with our software’s AR features.” 

For further information, please visit https://clublnk.comhttps://getvrly.comhttps://tylerirons.com, and https://www.marketwatch.com

Media Contact
Company Name: VRLY
Contact Person: Tyler Irons
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Country: United States
Website: https://tylerirons.com

Omaha Real Estate company utilizes new 6D technology amid pandemic

Omaha Real Estate company utilizes new 6D technology amid pandemic
Published: Oct. 16, 2020 at 10:28 AM CDT
 

OMAHA, Neb. (WOWT) – For one Omaha couple, they never thought they would be able to sell their home in the middle of the pandemic. Thanks to new technology, they were able to.

Most of us have bought our homes by looking at pictures printed on paper or on your computer screen. But now you can take it a step beyond, tour the home of your dreams and not even step foot into it.

Brett Clarke may look like he’s playing a video game…

“Here we are in the hunting lodge,” said Clarke.

But he’s touring a home.

It’s virtual reality and it’s this technology that sold the Clarke’s home.

“I didn’t really want people in our house walking around, I didn’t know where they’d been,” said Annie Clarke.

In the midst of a pandemic the Clarke’s wanted to sell their home, but they didn’t exactly want people in it.

“I’m sure there are families out there with that may have underlying conditions and things like that… there’s no way we would do it,” So that’s when they turned to Jeff Cohn and his tech-driven real estate firm kwElite.

“Not every consumer wants to have buyers in their house every single day,” said Cohn.

It’s this idea that drove kwElite to partner up with VRLY, virtual reality technology, taking the 3D technology we all know to the next level of 6D.

“Where they can tour the home much like a video game and be able to fly through the entire house see all the sightlines and everything’s interactive,” said Cohn.

“For example, look at this door, I can open the door go right up to this washer machine and look at all the details, in fact, this dryer says 2 hours and 50 minutes to dry this load of laundry. Now that’s a slow dryer,” said Cohn.

“So, they can open doors, they can look under countertops and really make sure before pulling the trigger on their largest investment ever that they’re making the right decision.”

The 6D technology even allows a potential buyer to visualize future changes, maybe different paint or new fixtures.

“We figured in the three months we weren’t going to see anybody and or be able to have buyers at that time,” said Cohn.

Not only did the Clarkes find a buyer, but it was also the technology that sealed the deal.

“They were able to take that virtual reality to their families, show them exactly what the house looked like, and get their blessing on the home that they were going to buy,” said Cohn.

In addition to the virtual reality, Cohn’s office in west Omaha even has loans, insurance, mortgage services, and more. It’s essentially a one-stop-shop for everything real estate.

Copyright 2020 WOWT. All rights reserved.

https://www.wowt.com/2020/10/16/omaha-real-estate-company-utilizes-new-6d-technology-amid-pandemic

Lincoln real estate market adjusts to new normal of COVID-19

Lincoln real estate market adjusts to new normal of COVID-19
Lincoln real estate market adjusts to new normal of COVID-19

The Lincoln real estate market has been humming along for years, setting records for sales volume and sale prices several years running.

That trend appeared to be continuing in the first couple months of the year, until the COVID-19 pandemic reared its ugly head.

Like many other businesses that rely on face-to-face interactions, with tasks that can’t be done from home, the local real estate market is feeling the effects of the coronavirus.

he Lincoln real estate market has been humming along for years, setting records for sales volume and sale prices several years running.

That trend appeared to be continuing in the first couple months of the year, until the COVID-19 pandemic reared its ugly head.

Like many other businesses that rely on face-to-face interactions, with tasks that can’t be done from home, the local real estate market is feeling the effects of the coronavirus.

This past Sunday, April 5, there were 51 open houses.

Some local real estate firms have stopped doing open houses altogether. Rodenburg said his firm recommended agents no longer hold open houses, and he personally has stopped doing them.

He still does occasional showings by appointment, but he said he is very careful about what he touches and makes sure to sanitize everything.

“I have Purell in one hand and Handi Wipes in the other,” Rodenburg said.

This past Sunday, April 5, there were 51 open houses.

Some local real estate firms have stopped doing open houses altogether. Rodenburg said his firm recommended agents no longer hold open houses, and he personally has stopped doing them.

He still does occasional showings by appointment, but he said he is very careful about what he touches and makes sure to sanitize everything.

“I have Purell in one hand and Handi Wipes in the other,” Rodenburg said.

Interest in virtual home tours has increased quite a bit not only in Lincoln but across the country.

“We’ve seen a huge rush of agents scrambling to find 3D virtual solutions to bring real estate listings to buyers,” said Tyler Irons, co-founder of VRLY, a Lincoln-based company that offers immersive 3D video tours of properties for sale.

“I get emails and calls daily from agents and brokerages alike not only in Nebraska but across the country,” he said, noting that some real estate brokerages are requiring every listing to have a 3D tour.

Irons said VRLY is growing rapidly and has plans to launch services in South Carolina, Florida, Texas, Utah, Massachusetts and in Canada.

It’s not just agents who are seeing coronavirus complications.

Rodenburg said he was working with an elderly couple who wanted to list their house for sale April 1 but decided to put their plans on hold because one of them has heart problems and was worried about potential exposure to the disease through showings.

Rodenburg also said he’s had a couple of buyers put things on hold because of financial concerns.

Coronavirus is also causing headaches for home inspectors and appraisers, Rodenburg said, because sellers are often leery of letting people traipse through their homes.

The good news, said Harner, is that unlike the real estate crash of the late 2000s, the current slowdown is not due to any structural problems with the market.

She noted that in 2008, there were more than 2,000 homes for sale in Lincoln at any given time, and mortgage interest rates hovered around 6%. Now, there are just more than 800 homes for sale in the market, and interest rates are hovering near a 10-year low below 3.5%.

“Today, the foundational framework of our economy is solid,” Harner said. “There is no oversupply in the market or plunging prices; healthy appreciation, slow and steady, has created a balanced and robust market to withstand the financial ramifications of COVID-19.”

Reach the writer at 402-473-2647 or molberding@journalstar.com.

On Twitter @LincolnBizBuzz.

Champions Fun Center to be replaced by ClubLNK

Champions Fun Center to be replaced by ClubLNK
Champions Fun Center to be replaced by ClubLNK
Published: Apr. 23, 2021 at 10:04 PM CDT
 

LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) -The ongoing pandemic seems to have claimed another Lincoln business as Champions Fun Center announced its closure this week. But the space won’t be without families for too long. A Lincoln childhood staple is getting some new life after 20 years.

“This happened really fast, it wasn’t like when they first shut down during the pandemic,” said Makaila Murphy, Director of ClubLNK. “It just happened…boom…boom boom…really quickly.”

The space will soon be known as ClubLNK, a membership-based complex for kids and families. A lot of groundwork has already been done for the group, and it plans to keep big items like a play place and video games, but changes are coming.

“One of the big changes is the bowling alley will leave and we will replace that with a basketball court and a turf area for speed and agility training,” said Tyler Irons, CEO and found of VRLY. “And the other big changes is the go-karts are leaving and we’re going to make than an outdoor skating track. Sort of an indoor/outdoor skating area”

Memberships will be on a monthly basis, starting at $100 a family.

“Parents can drop their children off , its just like any other gym you can drop them off,” said Irons. “We don’t have like daycare or anything like that. We aren’t responsible for the kids but they can come here and hangout.”

The group also runs two youth basketball clubs, which will now have a more permanent home for practices and games.

“Now having this we can actually reach plenty more kids if we wanted to,“ said Tommy Johnson, basketball director. “We can grow our family even more”

They hope to have ClubLNK up and running by early to mid-summer.

Copyright 2021 KOLN. All rights reserved.