-Scholastic Book Fairs Inc. leased 24,294 square feet of industrial space at 4625 W. 86th St. The tenant was represented
by Terry Busch of CBRE. The landlord, Biynah Industrial Partners LLC, was represented by Michael
Weishaar and Todd Vannatta of Cassidy Turley.
-Principal Financial Group leased 17,170 square feet at One College Park, 8910 Purdue Road. The tenant was represented by
Jon Owens of Cassidy Turley. The landlord, Zeller Realty Group, was represented by Zeller’s Mark
Vollbrecht and Tristan Glover.
-Arcadis U.S. Inc. leased 16,786 square feet at the Disciples Center, 130-132 E. Washington St. The tenant was represented
by Emmett Purcell and Chris Pulie of USI Real Estate. The landlord, Perennial Washington
Street LLC, was represented by Matt Langfeldt and Rich Forslund of Summit Realty Group.
-Angie’s List leased 16,786 square feet at the Disciples Center, 130-132 E. Washington St. The tenant was represented
by Mike Corr and Denice Michel of Jones Lang LaSalle. The landlord, Perennial Washington
Street LLC, was represented by Matt Langfeldt and Rich Forslund of Summit Realty Group.
-Arbor Homes leased 6,715 square feet of office space at 6666 E. 75th St. The landlord, Zimmer Real Estate Services, was
represented by Bryan Miller of Cassidy Turley. The tenant represented itself.
-Clinical Architecture leased 4,029 square feet at Meridian Mark I, 11611 N. Meridian St. The tenant was represented by Ralph
Balber of Newmark Knight Frank Halakar. The landlord, Zeller Realty Group, was represented by Zeller’s Tristan
Glover.
-Pinnacle of Indiana leased 2,495 square feet at One College Park, 8910 Purdue Road. The tenant was represented by Tim
Norton of Summit Realty Group. The landlord, Zeller Realty Group, was represented by Zeller’s Tristan
Glover.
-Einstein Bros Bagels leased 1,980 square feet at Lockefield Commons, 901 Indiana Ave. The tenant was represented by Mark
Perlstein and Keith Fried of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate. The landlord, Lockefield Commons Limited
Partnership, was represented by Mark Perlstein of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate.
-Menchie’s Frozen Yogurt leased 1,615 square feet at Stony Creek Marketplace, 17120 Mercantile Blvd, Noblesville.
The tenant was represented by Bart Jackson and Scot Courtney of Lee & Associates. The
landlord, Inland Southeast Stony Creek LLC, was represented by Larry Davis and John Baker
of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate.
-Verizon Wireless-Cellular Sales leased a 1,600-square-foot free-standing building at 7310 N. Keystone Ave. The landlord,
7310 LLC, was represented by Thomas Cortese of Acorn Group Inc. The tenant represented itself.
-Fox’s Pizza Den leased 1,600 square feet at Saratoga Shops, 1070 W. Main St., Plainfield. The landlord, Saratoga Associates
LLC, was represented by Keith Fried of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate. The tenant represented itself.

















"And the success of the Indiana GOP to not allow an expansion of Medicaid had nothing to do with Indiana hospitals' financial woes? Fixed that for you; editorial bias rebalanced. Seriously, there are so many things wrong with Obamacare that the only way one can view it as a success is to assume that it was designed to fail our way into a government single payor healthcare system. The system is complex, creates huge regulatory burdens and overhead and yet still does not have adequate means to control escalating health care costs. But then when you elect a 10th grade math drop out with no quantitative reasoning skills to be President of one of the world's most important economies in troubled times, you can't really be surprised by blatant stupidity.
No NIMBYs here to chase off a decent development. We don't need tons of parking and we'd happily play the role of host to a downtown Whole Foods.
Whatever you do, don't change a single thing about Broad Ripple. I want it to look just like it did in the late '70s, with 30% of the north side of Broad Ripple Avenue burned out and plenty of places to park. That's right Broad Ripple, NEVER CHANGE. Let the world pass you by, don't improve your empty, abandoned lots full of weeds. Someday someone will want to film a zombie movie here.
Hollywood could step in and make a movie about the history about this forlorn series. It could be a full celebrity cast of characters. WOW. http://www.advanceindiana.blogspot.com/2013/02/indiana-taxpayers-forced-to-pay-for.html
This shouldn't come as a shock to many. Austin is a great city, and Indy needs to take some notes. Austin invests in decent transit options, has a highly educated workforce, embraces a creative class, and --despite being the state capital-- is not micromanaged by rural and suburban legislators. Want Indy to grow? Invest in the city (i.e. spend money). Raise taxes a bit, and use the money to improve education. And keep the state legislature out of Indy the other 9 months of the year.