Real estate heavyweight CBRE moving from downtown to Keystone at Crossing
The city’s largest commercial brokerage has called downtown home for more than 35 years. It’s heading north to accommodate employees and consolidate offices.
The city’s largest commercial brokerage has called downtown home for more than 35 years. It’s heading north to accommodate employees and consolidate offices.
The Larmans’ fingerprints are all over Keystone at the Crossing—from The Fashion Mall at Keystone to a recently built $100 million mixed-use development.
The publicly traded company wants to leave the Parkwood Crossing office park in Carmel and is requesting $2.9 million in the form of a bond issue from the city of Indianapolis to help finance a new headquarters.
The bank has staked out the upscale Keystone at the Crossing submarket for a staffed, free-standing addition to its growing local operations.
The high-end, sports-centric bar and eatery shut its doors on Sunday, but its downtown location at Circle Centre mall remains open.
The Metropolitan Development Commission rejected a request from local developer Keystone Realty Group to rezone the site near Keystone at the Crossing to make way for a 60,000-square-foot office and retail building.
Simon Property Group Inc., the nation’s largest mall owner, is getting a big assist from an unlikely source in its bid to backfill wide swaths of space left by failed or struggling clothing chains.
A developer wants to build a $20 million office and retail building at the northwest corner of East 86th Street and North Keystone Avenue.
The $30 million apartment project will open 65 of 196 units by April 15, bringing another rental option to the upscale area.
The 315-room hotel, built in 1998 at Keystone at the Crossing, now boasts several amenities and improvements that give it a more modern feel.
Craft Street Restaurant & Bar has turned an oft-turned-over spot on 82nd Street into an upgraded neighborhood bar with potential.
Keystone Realty Group wants to rezone a 12.7-acre parcel at the northwest corner of East 86th Street and Keystone Avenue to construct the combination retail-office building.
The apartment project, part of the larger River North development, has a name now and should begin welcoming its first residents late this year.
Responsible for a portion of downtown’s apartment boom, the developer hopes relocating to Regions Tower will attract the younger workforce it’s helping bring to the urban core.
Credit for errors encouraged a return for a more satisfying second visit to the new mid-range steakhouse.
Stronger absorption in the metro area is pushing vacancy down and rental rates up, mid-year office reports show, even though downtown’s vacancy rate remains above 20 percent.
Hendricks Commercial Properties has purchased the adjacent La-Z-Boy building and is planning to build more apartments on the high-profile property at 86th and Keystone.
Construction on the 125-room hotel, part of PK Partners’ $80 million mixed-use development, should start later this year with an opening in 2016.
Despite an auction of inventory to satisfy a debt, Aronstam Fine Jewelers is in no danger of closing, the store’s owner says, thanks to the help of outside investors.
The expansion at Keystone at the Crossing would nearly double the insurance brokerage firm's Indiana workforce to 49.