Developer jumps into market with projects on south side, Carmel, Fishers and Avon
Also this week in the Property Lines retail roundup: Ragnarok Axe Throwing, Eat the Frog Fitness, Smoothie King, Aldi and more.
Also this week in the Property Lines retail roundup: Ragnarok Axe Throwing, Eat the Frog Fitness, Smoothie King, Aldi and more.
For his first 18 months, he was seemingly more comfortable trying to build accord behind the scenes.
With rise of biometrics and other technology, some think it’s time to change security protocol.
The temporary ice rink would operate from Aug. 15 to Dec. 31, according to town documents.
The owner of the seven-year-old Italian restaurant and wine bar said he was shutting it down after enduring years of nearby road construction that had taken a toll on the business.
Juniper on Main would recast the vacant house on Main Street as a restaurant featuring food common to the South Carolina and Georgia coasts. Also this week: the latest on Tire Discounters, Linden Tree Gifts and Pro Wake Watersports.
Brenda Stallings’ Jasper-based information technology firm has come a long way since it was launched out of a music store she opened in the 1970s. And with recent expansions into the Indianapolis and Louisville markets, Matrix Integration has designs on going even farther.
The seven-story structure, near I-69 and East 82nd Street, will be a pick-up point for vehicles purchased online.
The Old Town Design Group plans to build 103 single-family homes and 134 townhouse or condominium units on Carmel’s north side.
The Boulevard Station, built in 1922, was a stop on the Monon Route, which connected Chicago, Indianapolis and Louisville.
Crimes motivated by biases based on race, gender, religion and sexual orientation have broader ramifications on society than similar crimes carried out for other reasons.
Mother-daughter duo Karen Laine and Mina Starsiak plan to tap new neighborhoods, open a retail shop and further expand into vacation rental properties.
Carmel-based American Specialty Health specializes in connecting patients with chiropractors, acupuncturists, physical therapists and others who treat pain without using pharmaceutical drugs.
In addition to dropping the name it has used for the past 52 years, the Carmel-based public company is changing its ticker symbols on the NASDAQ market.
After six years of lower sales and permanently losing an exit from the highway, I will have to call it quits.
Despite having a land mass smaller than New Jersey, Israel leads the international community in startups and venture capital per capita.
Lake City, part of Warsaw-based Lakeland Financial Corp., will open an office this fall at 101 W. Ohio St.
Gov. Eric Holcomb, a Republican, said he’ll meet with lawmakers, legal experts, corporate leaders and “citizens of all stripes who are seeking to find consensus on this issue.”
The 50,000-square-foot facility on the southwest corner of State Road 32 and U.S. 31 will feature laser tag, bowling, axe throwing, an indoor ropes course, and an outdoor miniature golf course—as well as a restaurant and bar.
It took four years for well-known local businesswoman Pam Cooper to develop an app to connect cause-driven shoppers to businesses willing to donate a portion of sales to a charity the consumer chooses. It took her and her husband, tech industry veteran Tom Cooper, another five years to build their company into something formidable. It took them a lot less time than that to decide to sell their firm to a much bigger company earlier this year.