Developer plans $40M apartment and retail project
A local developer is planning a $40 million apartment and retail development northwest of 86th Street and Keystone Avenue.
A local developer is planning a $40 million apartment and retail development northwest of 86th Street and Keystone Avenue.
A local developer has acquired the northwest corner of 86th Street and Keystone Avenue and is working on plans for a $40 million apartment and retail project.
The restaurant at 5212 N. College Ave. sustained $1.5 million in damage. Firefighters were called to the two-story, 6,000-square-foot building early Thursday morning.
Why not look at the entire neighborhood instead of just this old site?
The 2-million-square-foot GM Indianapolis Metal Center, closed this year, sprawls over more than 100 acres on the west bank of the White River and enjoys some of the best views of the downtown skyline.
Indianapolis homicide detectives are investigating the death of a man whose body was found in a pool of blood behind an east-side apartment building on Wednesday morning. The unidentified male, believed to be in his 50s, died of unspecified injuries next to the Irvington Arms Apartments in the 5300 block of East Washington Street. Police found the man about 6:45 a.m. Detectives say they are in the process of identifying the victim and locating his family.
Indianapolis police are investigating a weekend shooting at an east-side apartment complex that killed two men. Razee Scott, 22, and Michael Harney, 27, both of Indianapolis, were shot to death in a parking lot of the Orleans Apartments complex late Saturday night. One victim was found inside a 2002 Chevrolet Tahoe and the other several feet away. The victims didn’t live at the Shortridge Road complex. Harney had a police record that included possession of cocaine and felony possession of a weapon.
A 20-year-old man was shot to death Monday night at the Carriage House Apartments in the 10100 block of Ellis Drive on the northeast side of Indianapolis. Police responded to a report of shots being fired about 10:30 p.m. and found Antwane Spearman suffering from a gunshot wound. He died shortly after they arrived. Detectives are investigating.
A local developer has a new plan for a prime Lockerbie parcel where ambitious development proposals have fizzled in the past, IBJ reported in print and at IBJ.com.
The Whitsett Group wants to build 190 affordable and market-rate apartments, 44,000 square feet of retail and office space, and more than 300 mostly underground parking spaces on a prime Lockerbie parcel.
The architecture firm A2SO4 plans to spend about $1 million to renovate a long-vacant former Catholic church near the Lockerbie neighborhood as its new headquarters.
Police are seeking a suspect in the shooting death of a man Sunday night at Springhill Apartments near West 46th Street and High School Road. The victim, a male in his early 30s, was shot in the head during an apparent home invasion. Police are withholding the victim’s identity until his family in Mexico is notified. Three other people inside the apartment at the time of the shooting were not injured and are cooperating with police.
A four-acre site just east of downtown with a rich history is being targeted by city officials and redevelopment leaders for redevelopment. They want to restore the once-vibrant spot at Washington and Gray streets in hopes that it will help revive the beaten-down corridor.
Check out a few more-detailed renderings of the newly named $156 million CityWay project at Delaware and South streets.
The $156 million mixed-use development at Delaware and South streets in Indianapolis has a new name designed to reference both the project’s downtown locale and the urban “way of life” it will offer.
One restaurant along Mass Ave has closed and a new one is in the works, leading off the latest Around Town Retail Roundup.
The long-vacant Keystone Towers apartment complex will be imploded Aug. 28 at 8 a.m., the Department of Metropolitan Development announced Monday afternoon.
Plans by a Valparaiso company to build 150 apartments along the Central Canal are closer to reality after city officials picked the developer's bid to buy an adjacent canal-front parcel.
Longtime Indianapolis developer launches spirited attempt to save baseball palace.