The Bernard Corrigan House is a historic residence at 1200 West 55th Street in the Country Club District, Kansas City, Missouri.
The building is an important regional example of the Prairie Style, and it was one of the earliest residential structures in Kansas City to make extensive use of reinforced concrete.
He hired architect Louis S. Curtiss to design his grand estate at the corner of 55th Street and Ward Parkway.
Heim was also involved with numerous other business ventures including real estate, banking, street railways, and telephone companies.
The house is a three-story structure built over a full basement, and it is about one hundred feet (30 m) long from north to south.
The foundation is reinforced concrete, and the exterior walls are faced with gray shot-sawn limestone from Carthage, Missouri.
The west wing contains the kitchen, dining room, butler's pantry, parlor, and a secondary staircase.