Broad Ripple Brewpub owners branching out to East 10th Street
John and Nancy Hill are purchasing a 96-year-old building and plan to open a restaurant and taproom in the up-and-coming corridor near downtown.
John and Nancy Hill are purchasing a 96-year-old building and plan to open a restaurant and taproom in the up-and-coming corridor near downtown.
The not-for-profit introduced the proposal for affordable housing and commercial space last year, but progress stalled after it narrowly missed out on $1.5 million in federal funding.
Danny Boy Beer Works is opening a draft room in Bloomington. Firebirds Wood Fired Grill recently debuted in Carmel, and Rita’s Italian Ice is doing business in Fishers.
Paradise Bakery & Cafe, which once operated a half-dozen restaurants in the Indianapolis area, will quit selling cookies in Indiana on Tuesday.
The offer of $65.50 a share in cash represents a 19 percent premium to Cabela’s most recent closing price, the companies said Monday in a written statement.
A former mayor of Carmel, a current mayor in Boone County, a bakery owner, a small concert venue owner, and two well-known Noblesville sisters are featured in IBJ’s annual Q&A extravaganza.
While Indianapolis pursues major sporting events and massive conventions—gatherings that attract tens of thousands of people and score tens of millions of dollars in economic impact—many neighboring counties are chasing small and midsize corporate confabs, weddings and senior-citizen bus tours.
In addition to having early voting at the Hamilton County Judicial Center, satellite voting centers will be open at the Carmel Clay Public Library and Fishers City Hall.
Anytime Fitness is also adding two Hamilton County locations, and Chipotle Mexican Grill is coming to Noblesville.
A new state board is trying to grapple with how to handle the big shortage in medical residencies, which will grow even worse as the state graduates more and more doctors.
A consortium led by Indianapolis-based mall giant Simon Property Group Inc. and rival General Growth Properties Inc. has won an auction for the assets of Aeropostale Inc., with a plan to keep open at least 229 of the bankrupt teen retailer’s stores.
Peter Sterling, who led the Children’s Museum of Indianapolis through a tremendous period of growth, died Wednesday in Waynesville, North Carolina.
Without the rescue, it appears the teen fashion retailer’s remaining stores are heading for liquidation, an event that will put about 10,000 people out of work. Aeropostale has five Indianapolis-area stores.
A partnership involving a local firm has acquired the eight-building complex from Duke Realty Corp., and is planning an amenity center for dining, fitness, conferences and workplace collaboration.
Kite Realty Group Trust has built an admirable record of picking winning locations for its centers and keeping them vibrant with tens of millions of dollars in upgrades.
In the school year that ended in May, nearly 175,000 students were enrolled in more than 235,000 career and technical classes. That’s an 11 percent increase since the 2012-2013 school year, when Gov. Mike Pence challenged schools to serve students going to work as well as students going to college.
In a development deal with Fishers, Indianapolis-based Citimark plans to purchase the 23-acre site that includes the long-vacant former Charles Schwab regional client center and the building that houses Launch Fishers.
The annual report of the city’s Capital Improvement Board shows the number of events at the Indiana Convention Center and Lucas Oil Stadium—and the total attendance for those events—fell sharply from 2014 to 2015.
Donald Trump spoke at a rally in Hamilton County amid speculation that he may pick Indiana Gov. Mike Pence as his running mate.
President Brad Skillman’s construction-management company got a big boost from its work on the $85 million Hamilton Southeastern College and Career Academy.