IBJ’s biggest real estate development stories of 2024
IBJ has reported extensively on numerous projects throughout this year in the core of Indianapolis and across the area—some that made significant progress and others that ground to a halt.
IBJ has reported extensively on numerous projects throughout this year in the core of Indianapolis and across the area—some that made significant progress and others that ground to a halt.
It’s been another busy year in Indiana health care and life sciences, with headlines nearly every week announcing another billion-dollar deal or investment.
New York came into the game with the NFL’s worst offense and was on a franchise-record 10-game losing streak.
In April, Hogsett made a surprise announcement that the city would pursue a Major League Soccer team and said he was talking with representatives of a yet-to-be-named ownership group about the possibility.
More than $8.5 billion in development is underway across downtown, with more coming as projects in their earliest stages wind their way through the planning process.
Officials say the hospital, with three 16-story patient towers, should receive its top beam—or be “topped out”—next spring.
In addition to its slate of annual conventions like National FFA, FDIC International, Gen Con and the Performance Racing Industry—which each bring in 30,000 or more people—the city played host to numerous one-time events, including the 2024 NBA All-Star weekend, the three-night Taylor Swift The Eras Tour stop, and the U.S. Olympic Swimming Trials.
This year, both a presidential and gubernatorial election year for Indiana, provided no shortage of political news.
Rising home prices and interest rates, higher insurance premiums and other factors are putting more homeowners under extreme pressure to keep up with payments, according to the report.
Rapper Mark Battles and soul band Durand Jones & the Indications are two Indiana acts planning to perform overseas in 2025.
Card & Associates is making plans to grow Hickory Junction, which already includes the $31 million Farmers Bank Fieldhouse and two planned hotels.
Riley Children’s Health soon will be led by a new administrator who will oversee its growth across the state and run its downtown anchor, Riley Hospital for Children, which turned 100 years old this fall.
The filing arrives two weeks after the trading of company shares was suspended by the New York Stock Exchange. Under Chapter 11 protection, The Container Store will continue to operate while it restructures.
Nordstrom’s board of directors unanimously approved the the proposed transaction, while top executives Erik and Pete Nordstrom—part of the Nordstrom family taking over the company—recused themselves from voting.
Kurt Williams claims Grand Universe Space Science Institute Inc. has failed to pay him more than $2 million since he began working for the company in 2015.
At the top of the list is host Mason King’s interview with Chick McGee, who has been a fixture on Indianapolis radio for 38 years as a cast member of “The Bob & Tom Show.”
Holcomb’s administration has focused its economic strategy on courting new companies and investing in those already here.
The Pacers and Colts haven’t given locals much to be jolly about this year.
The firm, which helps employers transition workers to individual health insurance plans, has more than doubled its workforce in the last year and hopes to go on an acquisition spree.
McGowan led the Indianapolis Convention and Visitors Association from 1984 to 2002 and was instrumental in the city’s efforts to land the 1987 Pan American Games, the 1980 and 1991 Final Fours and the Indianapolis Colts.