All-star real estate agent leadership sounding familiar
Ward takes first place among IBJ’s All-Star Teams sixth year in row.
Ward takes first place among IBJ’s All-Star Teams sixth year in row.
Fishers Town Council unanimously approved an economic development deal Monday that will allow Sun King Brewing Co. to plant some of its growing business in the suburban community. Members also voted on a commuter-bus subsidy.
U/S Sports Advisors said it will spend $1.1 million on an expansion at its Carmel headquarters, increasing employment by 36 jobs by the end of 2018.
An attorney for Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay filed the request for the continuance Monday. His trial had been scheduled for Aug. 28.
Fishers Town Council on Monday is expected to consider a subsidy of up to $22,500 to keep the Indy Express commuter buses running for the rest of 2014. Carmel City Council, meanwhile, has a $30,000 grant request on the table.
Regenstrief Institute Inc. plans to build a $13 million, 80,000-square-foot headquarters at 10th and Wilson streets, the Indiana University School of Medicine announced on Aug. 14. The facility will be built on the medical school's campus at IUPUI on land leased from Indiana University. Regenstrief, a not-for-profit medical research organization, plans to move 50 investigators, 165 staff members and a number of affiliated scientists into the building when it is completed in mid-2015. Most of those employees now work in nearby locations at 1050 Wishard Blvd. and 410 W. 10th St. The Regenstrief Foundation has committed $5 million to the new building and the IU School of Medicine is contributing another $1 million, officials said. Schmidt Associates of Indianapolis is handling architecture and interior design. Regenstrief investigators developed and operate the Regenstrief Medical Record System, which has served as the electronic medical record system for Wishard, and now Eskenazi Health, since 1973. It is the oldest continually operational medical record system in the United States, Regenstrief said.
Eli Lilly and Co. says it will close its Elanco Animal Health enzyme plant in Terre Haute by early 2016 as part of a consolidation, according to the Associated Press. Lilly spokesman Ed Sagebiel told the Tribune-Star that the Indianapolis-based company is consolidating all of its animal enzyme manufacturing to a site in Great Britain. He said the plant closure will affect 23 employees, all of whom will be offered comparable positions at a Lilly plant near Clinton that employs about 500 workers. Clinton is about 15 miles north of Terre Haute. The Terre Haute plant makes animal feed enzymes that help animals digest food more efficiently, boosting farm productivity. Lilly purchased the Terre Haute plant in 2012.
Carmel entrepreneur Zeke Turner has agreed to sell the real estate investment trust he started two years ago for $950 million to focus on his original nursing home development company, Mainstreet Property Group. HealthLease Properties REIT, which Turner leads as CEO, announced Aug. 13 that it will be sold to Ohio-based Health Care REIT Inc. The Toledo, Ohio-based company, also known as HCN, also agreed to form a development partnership with Mainstreet under which it will acquire 17 projects Mainstreet has under construction and 45 senior care campuses it plans to build. In all, the deal is worth more than $2.3 billion. HCN, the largest U.S. health care landlord by market value, said it will pay $14.20 per share in Canadian dollars for HealthLease, 31 percent more than HealthLease's stock price before the deal was announced. HealthLease Properties, which is listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange, owns 51 senior care facilities in Canada and the United States, including 12 in Indiana. In second-quarter results announced Aug. 12, the company’s revenue and profit doubled from the previous year, to $17.6 million and $5 million, respectively, in Canadian dollars. Mainstreet has been the fastest-growing company in the Indianapolis area over the past three years. Revenue skyrocketed to more than $66 million last year.
A federal judge said Indiana can challenge an Internal Revenue Service rule that offers tax credits to Hoosiers who purchase health insurance on Obamacare’s federal marketplace, HealthCare.gov. According to Bloomberg News, U.S. District Judge William T. Lawrence in Indianapolis denied an IRS bid to dismiss that portion of the state’s 2013 lawsuit, in which it claimed the rule illegally conflicts with a provision of the federal law limiting those tax credits to enrollees in state-created exchanges. Lawrence’s ruling comes three weeks after U.S. appeals courts in Washington, D.C., and in Richmond, Virginia, reached conflicting conclusions about availability of the subsidy for which 4.5 million people have qualified. Indiana was one of the states that opted to not create an exchange. Lawrence, in his ruling, rejected U.S. contentions that Indiana and the 39 state public school systems that joined it in the suit would suffer no harm from the rule. Lawrence did, however, reject Indiana’s contention the mandate violated its sovereignty, ruling it, and 25 other states, lost that argument in the early stages of a 2010 Obamacare challenge that ended with the U.S. Supreme Court upholding the legislation as a valid exercise of Congress’ taxing authority.
Indianapolis-based WellPoint Inc. will change its name back to Anthem Inc., the brand under which it sells most of its coverage, according to Bloomberg News. The name change will be completed by the end of the year, pending shareholder approval, the company said in a statement. WellPoint will hold a shareholder vote on the change in November. WellPoint and other large health insurers find themselves increasingly marketing directly to consumers, as Obamacare requires most uninsured Americans to obtain coverage and employers thrust more responsibility for costs on their workers. The company sells plans in 14 of the health care law’s new insurance exchanges, in most cases under its Anthem brand. The company doesn't sell plans under the WellPoint name. WellPoint Inc. was formed in 2004 when Indianapolis-based insurer Anthem Inc. completed a $16.5 billion merger with California-based WellPoint Health Networks Inc. Anthem Inc. was originally formed in 1995 when Indianapolis-based insurer Associated Group merged with Cincinnati-based Community Mutual Insurance Co. Anthem demutualized and conducted an initial public offering in 2001.
Bloomington’s Monroe Hospital LLC, which has had a close relationship with Indianapolis-based St. Vincent Health, filed for bankruptcy reorganization on Aug. 15 and plans to sell its business to a Canadian hospital operator. The Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition, filed in federal court in Indianapolis, said the 32-bed hospital had more than twice as many liabilities as assets. It has been losing money due to low patient traffic in the face of cross-town competition from Indiana University Health’s Bloomington Hospital. Monroe and St. Vincent signed a management agreement two years ago, with St. Vincent taking responsibility for Monroe’s quality and safety efforts, finance functions, physician relations and patient satisfaction. St. Vincent also considered adding Monroe to its 22-hospital network. Those merger talks and St. Vincent’s management of those Monroe services ended last October, but longtime St. Vincent executive Joe Roche was installed as Monroe’s CEO. St. Vincent is now one of Monroe’s largest creditors, with the hospital owing St. Vincent’s physician group $170,000. St. Vincent physicians provide cardiac care and orthopedic surgeries to Monroe patients. Even after the hospital is sold to a new owner, St. Vincent will try to continue its clinical relationship with Monroe.
-Holladay Construction Group LLC. partnered with Holladay Properties to convert a 17,000-square-foot warehouse into an office/warehouse suite for Accelerated Inc. at 5777 Decatur Blvd.
-Capitol Construction has completed a 16,000-square-foot expansion for Allied Solutions at 1320 City Center Drive, Carmel.
-Capitol Construction has completed a 3,400-square-foot office build-out for Body One Physical Therapy at 10412 Allisonville Road, Fishers.
-Capitol Construction has completed a 2,500-square-foot office expansion for PR Mortgage at 11555 N. Meridian St, Carmel.
-La-Z Boy Furniture leased 20,040 square feet at Clearwater Crossing, 3736-3958 E. 82nd St. The landlord, The Broadbent Co., was represented by Joe Kenney of Broadbent. The tenant represented itself.
-TwinMed LLC leased 11,470 square feet of office space at 6625 Network Way. The tenant was represented by Yumi Goodman of Colliers International. The landlord, Network Way Properties LLC, was represented by Kevin Gillihan of JLL.
-Wings Etc. leased 4,748 square feet at Greenfield Station, 1925 Melody Lane, Greenfield. The tenant was represented by Dean Almas of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate. The landlord, LOR Corp., was represented by Jacque Haynes of Cassidy Turley.
-Integrated Health Solutions Inc. leased 2,454 square feet at 6330 E. 75th St. The tenant was represented by Matt Jackson of Jackson IG LLC. The landlord, Metro Centre Office Park LLC, was represented by Bennett Williams and Todd Vannatta of Cassidy Turley.
-Quality Applied Systems Inc. leased 2,419 square feet at 6330 E. 75th St. The tenant was represented by Matt Jackson of Jackson IG LLC. The landlord, Metro Centre Office Park LLC, was represented by Bennett Williams and Todd Vannatta of Cassidy Turley.
-Hamilton County Pediatric Dentistry LLC leased 2,169 square feet at 13450 N. Meridian St., Carmel. The tenant was represented by Matt Jackson of Jackson IG LLC. The landlord, LHRET Ascension SV LLC, was represented by Lillebridge Healthcare Services Inc.
-Steven J. Shear DDS leased 2,078 square feet at 9002 N. Meridian St. The tenant was represented by Matt Jackson of Jackson IG LLC. The landlord, PHT Lakeview LLC, was represented by Travis Tucker of Duke Realty.
-Style Encore leased 3,260 square feet at Greenwood Place, 7759-7921 U.S. 31 South. The landlord, The Broadbent Co., was represented by Joe Kenney of Broadbent. The tenant represented itself.
-Premier Pharmacy leased 1,625 square feet at Fishers Town Center, 8395 E. 116th St., Fishers. The landlord, The Broadbent Co., was represented by Brian Broadbent. The tenant represented itself.
-Ooh LaLa Nail Spa leased 1,600 square feet at Fashion Mall Commons, 8487 Union Chapel Road. The landlord, The Broadbent Co., was represented by John Beuoy of Broadbent. The tenant represented itself.
-R&A Fashions leased 1,200 square feet at Lafayette Shoppes, 3840-3882 Lafayette Road. The landlord, The Broadbent Co., was represented by Jim Mosher of Broadbent. The tenant represented itself.
Homegrown craft-beer maker Sun King Brewing Co. plans to build a second production facility and tasting room in Fishers, adding capacity as it widens its reach. The Town Council will consider a $2.5M economic development deal Monday night.
Lilly expects to soon announce late-stage clinical trial results for two biotech drugs designed to slow the inflammation caused by autoimmune diseases. By the end of the year, it will announce results for a third.
HealthLease Properties REIT, which is led by Mainstreet Property’s Zeke Turner, will be sold to Ohio-based Health Care REIT Inc., along with 17 projects Mainstreet has under construction. The deal includes 45 future projects.
Near North Development Corp. is serving as master developer of the project, which is using $488,000 in U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development grants.
Mass Ave retailers are making a return trip to Carmel’s Main Street, and they could stay longer this time.
-Buchanan Group Services LLC leased 80,000 square feet of industrial space at 2525 N. Shadeland Ave. The tenant was represented by John Snell of Snell Real Estate Evaluation Co. Inc. The landlord, 2525 Shadeland LLC, was represented by Todd Vannatta and Michael Weishaar of Cassidy Turley.
-DSG Indiana LLC leased 75,578 square feet of industrial space at 909 Whitaker Road, Plainfield. The tenant was represented by Luke Wessel of Cassidy Turley. The landlord, Industrial Income Trust, was represented by Brian Seitz of JLL.
-Pilkington North American leased 10,027 square feet of industrial space at 612 Blanchard St., Shelbyville. The tenant was represented by Jason Speckman of Cushman & Wakefield/Summit. The landlord, 222 Group LLC, was represented by Todd Vannatta of Cassidy Turley.
-Pet Supplies Plus leased 7,011 square feet of retail space in Indian Creek Commons Shopping Center, 10625 Pendleton Pike, Suite A-1. The tenant was represented by Mark Perlstein of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate and John Liprando of Sullivan Hayes. The landlord, Viking Partners Indian Creek LLC, was represented by Jamison Downs, Seth Biggerstaff and Kyle Hughes of Veritas Realty.
-Hoosier Connection Limousine Inc. leased 4,318 square feet of industrial space at 5545 W. Raymond St. The tenant was represented by Ryan Carroll of Carson Realty. The landlord, Iron Point Titan Asset Management LLC, was represented by Bryan Poynter of Cassidy Turley.
-Center Grove Dentistry PC leased 2,800 square feet at 1405 W. County Line Road, Greenwood. The tenant was represented by Matt Jackson of Jackson IG LLC. The landlord, First Financial Collateral Inc., was represented by Steve Beals and Richard King of Lee & Associates.
-World Finance leased 2,580 square feet of retail space in Walnut Hills Plaza Shopping Center, 2008 Stafford Road, Plainfield. The tenant was represented by Seth Biggerstaff of Veritas Realty. The landlord, Walnut Bliss LLC, was represented by Todd Camesasca of Kosene & Kosene.
-Flynndogg Enterprises LLC, dba Hot Box Pizza, leased 2,400 square feet at 14300 Mundy Drive, Suite 700, Noblesville. The tenant was represented by Jason S. Challand of Echelon Realty Advisors. The landlord, Prairie Lakes II LLC, was represented by Liz Yoho of Providence Development.
-The Voice Clinic LLC leased 2,115 square feet at 1185 W. Carmel Drive, Carmel. The tenant was represented by Matt Jackson of Jackson IG LLC. The landlord, Old Meridian Investments LLC, represented itself.
-A Breathe of Heaven leased 1,360 square feet of retail space in Indian Creek Commons Shopping Center, 10625 Pendleton Pike, Suite A-9. the landlord, Viking Partners Indian Creek LLC, was represented by Jamison Downs, Seth Biggerstaff and Kyle Hughes of Veritas Realty. The tenant represented itself.
-Sherman Wireless leased 800 square feet of retail space in Brightwood Plaza Shopping Center, 2435 N. Sherman Drive. The landlord, Brightwood Plaza Investors LLC, was represented by Kyle Hughes, Paul Rogozinski and Seth Biggerstaff of Veritas Realty. The tenant represented itself.
-Roman & Leo leased 550 square feet of retail space at 8664 E. 116th St., Fishers. The tenant was represented by Seth Biggerstaff of Veritas Realty. The landlord, Fishers Depot LLC, was represented by Hamada Ibrahim of R.P. Lux Commercial Real Estate Services.
Major Hospital is seeking public input on its plans to build a $100 million hospital on the northern edge of Shelbyville, according to The Shelbyville News. The plans, which Major executives have been mulling since 2003, call for a 240,000-square-foot facility that would connect to Major’s Benesse Oncology Center in the Intelliplex business park. Major has also opened orthopedic, cardiology and OBGYN centers in the park. Major’s inpatient hospital in the center of Shelbyville has 72 beds, but the vast majority of the care Major provides is on an outpatient basis. Major has already begun to solicit bids from construction firms and bond rating agencies. CEO Jack Horner said the Major Hopsital board could make a decision on building a new hospital by October.
St. Vincent Heart Center wants to build a helipad about a half-mile from the specialty hospital. Currently, helicopter ambulances transporting cardiovascular patients must land at a borrowed facility a couple of miles north, on the opposite side of heavily traveled U.S. 31—adding as much as 20 minutes to the trip. Carmel’s Board of Zoning Appeals denied a similar request back in 2008, saying the proposed location was too close to nearby neighborhoods. But the newly proposed location at 10202 N. Meridian St. is less residential. The now-vacant land was once the home of Pilgrim Lutheran Church, which moved to 106th Street in 2012 to make way for the U.S. 31/I-465 interchange improvements now under construction. The zoning board is scheduled to consider the request at its Aug. 25 meeting.
Warsaw-based Symmetry Medical Inc. plans to sell off the orthopedics components subsidiary that generates nearly 80 percent of its revenue, according to Greater Fort Wayne Business Weekly. Massachusetts-based Tecomet, which is part of Genstar Capital, has agreed to pay $450 million for the OEM Solutions subsidiary. As part of the sale, Symmetry Medical will transfer ownership of its surgical instrument business, Symmetry Surgical, to the company’s shareholders and turn Symmetry Surgical into a newly traded public company. Shareholders would get one share of the new company for every four shares of Symmetry Medical stock. OEM Solutions generated nearly $81 million in revenue in the second quarter. Symmetry Surgical, meanwhile, saw $20.4 million in second-quarter revenue, down 8.7 percent from a year earlier.
WellPoint Inc.’s California subsidiary has partnered with the not-for-profit health plan Blue Shield of California to pay $80 million to launch a medical data sharing portal, according to the Associated Press. The California Integrated Data Exchange, known as Cal INDEX, is designed to share patients’ medical claims records electronically among doctors and hospitals, even for emergency room patients. Mark Morgan, president of WellPoint’s Anthem Blue Cross plan in California, said the health plans will mimic successful models such as the New York e-Health Collaborative and Indiana Health Information Exchange. The health plans’ information from patients' billing claims could supplement treatment records in the 30 health information exchanges health care providers have already created in California.
Katelyn Becht, a nurse practitioner, has joined St. Vincent Medical Group in Carmel. Becht received a bachelor’s degree from Purdue University and a master’s degree in nursing administration from Indiana Wesleyan University in Marion.
Dr. Andrew Miller has joined Eskenazi Health Midtown Community Mental Health as a child and adolescent psychiatrist. He earned his medical degree from the Indiana University School of Medicine. He received a bachelor's degree in biology from IU-Bloomington.
Dr. Peter Hogg, an orthopedic surgeon, has joined Franciscan Physician Network Orthopedic Specialists. He earned his medical degree from the Indiana University School of Medicine and a bachelor’s degree in biochemistry from DePauw University.
Andrea Pfeifle, a physical therapist, has been named the first assistant dean and director of the Indiana University Center for Interprofessional Health Education and Practice. The center was created to prepare future health care providers to deliver team-based care. Pfeifle comes to IU from the University of Kentucky, where she held a similar position. She earned a doctorate in education from the University of Kentucky.
St. Vincent Heart Center is seeking city permission to build a helipad on church-owned property south of 103rd Street in Carmel, about a half-mile from the specialty hospital.
B. Happy Peanut Butter is a hit at the summer market—and then some. Available at more than a dozen retail outlets in central Indiana, its seven varieties of hand-packed PB could produce sales of $100,000 this year.
A rush of new office, residential and retail projects suggest real estate developers in Broad Ripple Village remain optimistic in the midst of high-profile incidents of crime.
For-profit college ITT Educational Services Inc., already under pressure from the U.S. Education Department, is facing stricter terms from lenders that could put its operations at risk.