Local firm pays $34M for two downtown apartment properties
Birge & Held snatched the Maxwell and Mozzo buildings out of Milhaus Development’s apartment portfolio, which has been on the market since February.
Birge & Held snatched the Maxwell and Mozzo buildings out of Milhaus Development’s apartment portfolio, which has been on the market since February.
Attorney Matt Price, engineer Andrew Heard and business coach Paul McCoy teamed up to purchase the 13-acre property in 2015, concerned about projects other developers might want to pursue there.
American Senior Communities has sued its former CEO and three other executives accused of embezzling more than $16 million from the company.
Mickey Maurer and Bob Schloss have shared ownership of the media company for 27 years but decided to bring in Nate Feltman as part of their succession plan.
King Park Development Corp. is partnering with two builders on the project, known as Monon16, to bring a mix of affordable and market-rate housing to the up-and-coming King Park area.
Tens of thousands of former students who say they were swindled by for-profit college operators like ITT Educational are being left in limbo as the Trump administration delays action on requests for loan forgiveness.
A national brokerage says Colts home-game seats are the lowest-priced on the secondary market of any NFL team. Local brokers say some tickets are selling well below face value.
The new “clarifying guidance” from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services could provide a big challenge to new micro hospitals popping up in central Indiana and nationally.
Amazon.com Inc.’s splashy takeover of Whole Foods, complete with deep price cuts, did more than bring a surge of publicity to the chain: It boosted customer traffic.
Doug Dayhoff, who is credited with transforming Upland Brewing Co. from a small brewpub into a regional brewery, is stepping down as president and part-owner.
Tech leaders, including Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff, think Indianapolis would be a great location for Amazon’s second headquarters. And, like other cities in the running, it has some strengths and weaknesses.
No particular industry sector appears safe from the impact, as the county’s unemployment rate falls below 3 percent. Companies in health care, information technology, advanced manufacturing and construction are all struggling to find workers.
The local office of Lee & Associates plans to more than double the number of brokers it devotes to the sector, as industrial vacancy remains solidly in the single digits.
Observatory supports STEM education, ignites passion for science.
Trains might be permanently stalled on the Nickel Plate Railroad in southern Hamilton County, but officials in the northern communities are embracing the idea of getting passenger trains moving.
Corporex, which announced earlier this month that the fitness club would close on Sept. 30, is shopping the site as an opportunity for an office redevelopment.
A new study shows that Indianapolis area home values have increased just 12.8 percent increase over a 15-year period. That’s less than in metro areas on the coasts and even some in the Midwest.
A Fort Wayne fixture is coming back to Indianapolis, with plans to open a craft chocolate shop and sundae bar in the Keystone at the Crossing area.
The approval is one step required to close the deal, which is a bold move into physical stores for Amazon, and has the possibility of making big changes to the supermarket industry and online grocery ordering.
The project would stand six stories and blend new construction with old by incorporating the facade and another portion of the original building at 119 S. Meridian St.