Neighborhoods rally against digital billboards
A proposal to lift Marion County’s ban on digital billboards will be heard for a second time Monday night, and leaders from six neighborhood organizations are prepared to testify against it.
A proposal to lift Marion County’s ban on digital billboards will be heard for a second time Monday night, and leaders from six neighborhood organizations are prepared to testify against it.
Whether Calumet Specialty's depressed stock price combined with its rich quarterly dividend create a buying opportunity is the subject of intense debate among investors these days.
The show, which airs at 10 p.m. Thursday, follows Durham’s path from his modest roots in Seymour, Indiana, through his quest to become the world’s richest businessman to his arrest and conviction for running a $200 million Ponzi scheme.
As of June 30, First Merchants Bank had amassed $958 million in deposits at 27 Indianapolis-area offices, placing it 10th, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. data shows.
Minneapolis-based Groveland Capital LLC has filed notice that it will seek to replace Sardar Biglari and Biglari Holdings Inc.’s other five directors with its own nominees at the company’s annual meeting.
Our roundup of highlights from 2014 in Indianapolis business news.
Just five days after Simon Property Group spun off its strip centers and smaller malls into Washington Prime Group, executives began plotting a multibillion-dollar acquisition.
The Indianapolis-based speaker maker is responding to challenges in its industry by returning to its roots—emphasizing premium products, including home speaker systems costing $2,500 to $10,000.
An inspiring story of three women who built Hoosier Momma into a hot business has taken an ugly turn, with the Brownsburg company launching a legal assault against the founder who dreamed up its signature Bloody Mary mix.
Robert A. Coons rose from controller to vice president to chief administrative officer at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology after joining the Terre Haute institution in 1989.
It's not clear whether the settlement Steak n Shake has reached with St. Louis-based Druco Restaurants will give the franchisee more leeway on pricing.
ZergNet.com, an Indianapolis-based Internet company that can claim billionaire Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban as its seed funder, has added more financial backers.
Ousted PGA President Ted Bishop became the latest sports exec punished for making insensitive comments, reflecting a growing effort by sports bodies to react decisively on controversial statements.
JPMorgan Chase argues it did a "solid" job managing trust accounts endowed by Eli Lilly Jr. The banking giant says the church's lawsuit cherry-picks facts and paints a "grossly inaccurate picture."
A subsidiary of Simon Property Group Inc. is suing the world’s largest retail traffic counter, claiming it’s unjustly profiting from cameras installed in stores at Castleton Square Mall.
Even before taking over, Eddie Pillow is making changes at the logistics and courier company his dad started in 1988.
-TriMedX leased 26,029 square feet of office space at 5555-5587 W. 73rd St. The tenant was represented by Mike Semler of Cassidy Turley. The landlord, Duke Realty Corp., represented itself.
-HopCat-Broad Ripple leased 9,620 square feet of retail space in the Broad Ripple Parking Garage, 6280 N. College Ave. The tenant was represented by Ben Andrews of Sperry Van Ness. The landlord, 6280 LLC, was represented by Bart Jackson and Scot Courtney of Lee & Associates.
-Bspot leased 3,887 square feet at Ironworks at Keystone, 2727 E. 86th St. The tenant was represented by Brian Epstein of UrbanSpace. The landlord, Ironworks Indianapolis LLC, was represented by Mark Perlstein and Steve Delaney of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate.
-GPE leased 3,740 square feet of flex space at Roosevelt Business Park, 2506 Roosevelt Ave. The landlord, Gilliatte Family Realty LLC, was represented by Larry W. Harshman of Harshman Property Services LLC. The tenant represented itself.
-Now Courier Inc. leased 3,200 square feet of industrial space at 2525 N. Shadeland Ave. The tenant was represented by Ryan Kelly of Cushman & Wakefield/Summit. The landlord, Orton Development Inc., was represented by Todd Vannatta and Michael Weishaar of Cassidy Turley.
-General Services Administration renewed its lease for 2,407 square feet of office space at 10 W. Market St. The landlord, MT Acquisitions LLC, was represented by Bennett Williams and Andrew Martin of Cassidy Turley. The tenant represented itself.
-Dr. Kenneth Ackles Sr. leased 1,466 square feet of office space in the Meridian Professional Building, 3266 N. Meridian St. The landlord, PBB III LLC, was represented by Larry W. Harshman of Harshman Property Services LLC. The tenant represented itself.
-Protis Executive Innovations Inc. leased 1,217 square feet of office space in the Barrister Building, 155 E. Market St. The landlord, Crown Barrister LLC, was represented by Larry W. Harshman of Harshman Property Services LLC. The tenant represented itself.
-Unique Heart Productions LLC leased 517 square feet of office space in the Stock Yards Bank Building, 136 E. Market St. The landlord, Crown Stock Yards LLC, was represented by Larry W. Harshman of Harshman Property Services LLC. The tenant represented itself.
Disney destroyed Broadway. Disney saved Broadway. You hear both sides.
A settlement filed with a federal bankruptcy judge would create a fund of more than $100 million to compensate victims of a nationwide meningitis outbreak linked to a Massachusetts pharmacy, lawyers said Tuesday. The outbreak sickened dozens in Indiana and killed at least 10.