2017 TOP STORIES: Dining year in review
Cerulean, LongBranch and Barcelona Tapas are among the eateries that closed, but Indy welcomed Burger Study, Crispy Bird, Open Society Public House and more.
Cerulean, LongBranch and Barcelona Tapas are among the eateries that closed, but Indy welcomed Burger Study, Crispy Bird, Open Society Public House and more.
The sale of the 300-doctor practice to suburban Minneapolis-based UnitedHealth Group marked the end of a 19-year run as a proud, independent player.
I’m looking back with great pleasure at “The Great Bike Race,” “Human Rites” and “Barbecue,” among others.
Death claimed several national and international newsmakers in business, finance and public affairs in 2017. Indianapolis also lost several notable public figures.
J. Benzal exited Massachusetts Avenue in October and is moving to new space near where a national men’s clothier closed earlier this year.
First taking root in southern Indiana, Big Woods Restaurants is planning its northernmost outpost yet. And construction is under way on a $15 million athletic facility in Noblesville.
Banks aren’t usually among a community’s fastest-growing businesses. But most banks are vastly different from Carmel’s Merchants Bancorp.
The 5-year-old Carmel biotech has won plenty of attention from Wall Street and has secured more than $100 million through licensing deals and a stock offering to help fund expensive clinical trials.
The company recently chosen by the city of Westfield to run concession stands at Grand Park has racked up more than 30 food-inspection violations—including multiple infractions for mouse droppings—during its short tenure operating the restaurants in the Grand Park Events Center.
Attorney Karl Haas worked on some of the Indianapolis area’s biggest real estate projects over past last three decades.
Tech entrepreneur Scott Jones maintains the woman’s allegations that the consulting firm treated her unfairly and hoped to use her to perpetrate fraud are without merit.
The possible combination of Ascension (the parent of St. Vincent Health) and Providence St. Joseph Health could set off a scramble for physician recruiting and a push back against insurers who have been trying to steer patients away from costly hospital settings.
Sue and Chris Estep, owners of RoundTripper Baseball Academy in Westfield, say they met with Mayor Andy Cook to discuss the possibility of relocating to Grand Park.
When downtown’s upscale Cerulean stops serving on Dec. 31, it will mark the end of a brutal year for the local restaurant industry marked by an unusually high number of closings.
Pressure is building on the insurer to drop its conservative, bread-and-butter approach after one of its biggest rivals, Aetna Inc., agreed to be bought by drugstore chain CVS Health for $69 billion.
Michigan City-based Horizon Bancorp has $3.5 billion in assets and operates 68 offices in Michigan, Ohio and Indiana, including locations in Bargersville, Carmel, Franklin, Greenwood and Indianapolis.
Following seven years of growth in new-vehicle sales, U.S. consumers appear to be tapping the brakes—but the auto industry says the slowdown is not causing them concern.
We try Carmel’s Rad’s and Irvington’s Batters for the alleged most important meal of the day.
Commercial property owners, responsible for covering more than 95 percent of the proposed EID’s cost, must ask precisely what its tangible benefits will be.
The city of Westfield’s contract with Carmel-based Urick Concessions, which has been operating the outdoor food stands at the sports complex since it opened in 2014, ends Dec. 31.