Mixed-Use

Transit, sustainable development likely to be themes in rescue of near-north neighborhoodRestricted Content

June 1, 2009
Chris O'Malley
Local leaders and, soon, a national team of experts, are quietly developing a strategy to revitalize Marion County's biggest concentration of brownfield sites and impoverished urban neighborhoods, centered at East 22nd Street and the Monon Trail.
More

Grad students dream up plans for mass transitRestricted Content

April 27, 2009
Chris O'Malley
Architecture and urban design students from Ball State have created a vision for urban renewal that is arguably more compelling than the Central Indiana Regional Transit Authority's principal, utilitarian goal of reducing northeast-side highway congestion and air pollution by running a diesel commuter train atop the old Nickel Plate Railroad corridor.
More

Westfield plans $60M youth-sports complex

April 23, 2009
Cory Schouten
The mayor of Westfield announced plans this morning to build a $60 million youth sports complex with a 4,000-seat multipurpose outdoor stadium, indoor sports facilities, and fields for baseball, soccer, softball and lacrosse. The sports facilities would anchor a 1,500-acre development by locally based Estridge Co. along Towne Road between 146th and 161st streets.
More

Jefferson Plaza renovation approaches endRestricted Content

February 16, 2009
Katie Maurer

The Jefferson Plaza renovation, which has been renamed Allen Plaza after its developer, will include restaurants, office space, condos, and is also working to achieve LEED environmental certification.

More

Mass Ave redevelopment reaches a roadblockRestricted Content

January 19, 2009
Cory Schouten
Indianapolis Public Schools is looking for a new redevelopment strategy for its 11-acre facility on Massachusetts Avenue after an ambitious proposal for the historic former Coca-Cola bottling plant fizzled.
More

Fishers tables $100M developmentRestricted Content

November 24, 2008
An Ohio developer and the town of Fishers have agreed to cancel a 2007 development agreement that called for a $100-million mixed-use project featuring 250,000 square feet of retail space and 150,000 square feet of office.
More

Ralston Square development lures bar, hotel, bowling alleyRestricted Content

July 7, 2008
Cory Schouten
A trendy bar and an upscale hotel have agreed to anchor the 11-story Ralston Square project slated for South Street between Meridian and Pennsylvania streets. The developers of the $60 million mixed-use project are moving forward after landing the tenants necessary to secure a loan commitment, said Brian Epstein, president of locally based Urban Space Commercial Properties and a partner on the project.
More

Renovated Central Library spawns neighborhood revivalRestricted Content

April 28, 2008
Cory Schouten
A local developer plans to spend up to $45 million building a "north village of downtown" on several parcels it has assembled near the Central Library. Buckingham Cos. plans to build apartments, offices, restaurants and retail space-all surrounding its headquarters in the three-story Stokely-Van Camp building at the southeast corner of Meridian and St. Joseph streets.
More

Premier Properties lays off workers as lawsuits, debt pile upRestricted Content

April 7, 2008
Cory Schouten
Premier Properties USA Inc. has eliminated about half its headquarters staff--more than 40 employees--as banks seize several of its properties and CEO Christopher P. White faces a barrage of new lawsuits alleging unpaid bills, defaulted loans, illegally redirected rent payments and check fraud.
More

Former RCA industrial site to get $20M rehabRestricted Content

January 21, 2008
Cory Schouten
A Bloomington company that revived a former Thomson Consumer Electronics/RCA plant in that city is taking a shot at redeveloping one of the largest industrial eyesores in Indianapolis, also a former RCA complex. Pinnacle Properties plans to spend $20 million redeveloping the 13-building property northwest of Sherman Drive and East Michigan Street.
More

Developers have new plans for cornerRestricted Content

December 31, 2007
Cory Schouten
The retail juggernaut at 86th Street and Keystone Avenue could get even stronger in the next several years. Locally based Premier Properties USA Inc. revealed plans in 2007 for a $750 million redevelopment of a prime corner near The Fashion Mall at Keystone.
More

Concert hall component would test demandRestricted Content

November 19, 2007
Jennifer Whitson
Entertainment is a big part of a $480 million development proposed for the south side of downtown--plans include a 3,400-seat theater to attract the likes of Bruce Springsteen and first-run tours of Broadway shows such as "Wicked." The question is whether the city can support another midsize venue.
More

SoDo proposal faces stiff oddsRestricted Content

November 19, 2007
Cory Schouten
If Circle Centre mall were built today, it would cost $420 million. Throw in another $60 million, and you've got the price of Legends District-SoDo, a proposed mixed-use development on the south edge of downtown.
More

Developer lures Whole Foods across street into Venu projectRestricted Content

October 29, 2007
Cory Schouten
The developer of a $750 million mixed-use project called Venu has acquired a 13-acre site across the street from where another developer had planned to build condos and a Whole Foods Market.
More

Ralston Square project would honor city's first plannerRestricted Content

October 8, 2007
Cory Schouten
A local development team is working on a 10-story, mixed-use tribute to a man who helped design the original plan for Indianapolis, Alexander Ralston. The $60 million project, dubbed Ralston Square, would feature a 150-room hotel, 55 condos, a 617-space parking garage and 41,000 square feet of retail space.
More

Woodfield Crossing plan calls for hotel, offices, condos, theaterRestricted Content

May 28, 2007
Cory Schouten
A local firm plans to redevelop a quiet corner near the Fashion Mall into a mixed-use behemoth with a full-service hotel, 5,000-seat theater, hundreds of condos, and more than a million square feet of office and retail space.
More

Rescue for MSA site fell shortRestricted Content

May 14, 2007
Cory Schouten
A high-profile local firm that quietly negotiated last fall to salvage the stalled redevelopment of the Market Square Arena site abandoned its plans when the city decided instead to solicit new proposals early this year.
More

MSA Round 2 plans pitched by local development teamsRestricted Content

April 23, 2007
Cory Schouten
Two new proposals for the parking lot formerly known as Market Square Arena are shorter and less dramatic than plans for a 31-story tower that fell through last year. But each of the new sets of plans has its flourishes.
More

Condos offering live/work space are hotRestricted Content

April 9, 2007
Cory Schouten
The age-old concept of living above your workplace is catching on again in Indianapolis, just as the developers of Douglass Pointe Lofts had hoped. The $2.65 million landmark at 25th and Delaware streets already will soon also be known for a diverse roster of local businesses.
More

Developer moving on after failed Crown Hill projectRestricted Content

April 2, 2007
Cory Schouten
In the eyes of many at a rezoning hearing late last month, the developers from locally based Mann Properties were bad guys. They wanted to build homes and a retail center on 71 mostly wooded acres north of Crown Hill Cemetery. So when the Metropolitan Development Commission denied Mann's request, the crowd erupted in applause.
More

Duke, Lauth, Mansur join MSA site frayRestricted Content

March 26, 2007
Cory Schouten
A who's-who of local firms is planning bids to redevelop the Market Square Arena site with mixed-use projects that would depart sharply from previous efforts focused on residential. New plans are expected to include retail , offices, apartment units and condos backed by high-profile local developers that didn't bid before.
More

Crown Hill development showdown loomingRestricted Content

March 19, 2007
Cory Schouten
Debate over a developer's plan to buy 71 acres of woods and wetlands on Crown Hill Cemetery's northern edge for a retail-and-residential project will come to a head this week when the Metropolitan Development Commission votes on the proposal.
More

Meridian Street landmark gets new lifeRestricted Content

February 26, 2007
Tammy Lieber
Buckingham Cos., the Indianapolis-based owner/manager of more than 60 apartment complexes in five states, has broadened its development sphere to include three square blocks of downtown real estate.
More

Suburban builder J. Greg Allen to tackle downtownRestricted Content

January 15, 2007
Jennifer Whitson
J. Greg Allen & Associates has made a name for itself building suburban subdivisions, office buildings and retail complexes. Now, the developer is poised to tackle a pair of projects downtown.
More

Canal site picked for $33M projectRestricted Content

December 4, 2006
Jennifer Whitson
A local developer plans to build a $33 million, four-story apartment and retail complex on the Central Canal just north of Michigan Street. Flaherty & Collins Properties has the three-acre parcel under contract from American United Life Insurance Co.
More
Page  << 1 2 3 4 5 6 >> pager
Sponsored by
ADVERTISEMENT

facebook - twitter on Facebook & Twitter

Follow on TwitterFollow IBJ on Facebook:
Follow on TwitterFollow IBJ's Tweets on these topics:
 
Subscribe to IBJ
  1. These higher rates Co. e about only because physicians are now hospital employees. otherwise physicians couldn't charge these rates and share the windfall with the hospital. Community/rural hospitals probably not buying physicians practices and thus weren't getting the windfall anyway.

  2. The incentive for poor people to get themselves off public assistance and "no longer be poor" is even with help...they're STILL POOR! Being poor, even with some assistance, isn't all that pleasant. (I speak from experience) It's a stubborn myth that poor people, who are on public assistance, are sitting in the lap of luxury. You should try living on just those "freebies" that you mentioned and see how meager they actually are. By the way, I didn't mean you had to buy/own a puppy...just pet one. :)

  3. As near as I can tell the minority has ZERO constitutional obligation to offer a quorum to the majority. A requirement for quorum was inserted into the constitution so that tyrannical majorities could not simply shove through odious and objectionable legislation (which is exactly what they did.) By allowing a tyrannical majority to charge fines against the minority for exercising their constitutional prerogative to deny quorum the court as made a mockery of constitutional governance in the state of Indiana.

  4. The voters elected the Reps to make a vote not walk out on the vote. They had to the right to exercise their opinion and vote "no" to the bill. Let me ask you this if you walked out of your job for 5 straight weeks would you get paid? Would you even have a job to go back to? If any elected official walks out on the people they should be arrested for stealing tax dollars from the public. They were elected to do a job and not leave when the job gets stuff.

  5. I have been to several of their locations in Pennsylvania and always go in for 1 item and leave with a basket full of things. I'm very happy they decided on Indiana, now if only they would put the other store in eastside.

ADVERTISEMENT