Roundup: Korean restaurant, kickboxing studio, Potbelly on tap for Carmel
Carmel’s first Korean restaurant is scheduled to open Friday.
Carmel’s first Korean restaurant is scheduled to open Friday.
Below are Indianapolis-area mergers and acquisitions that closed in 2015 for which financial details were not available. The list excludes the most-talked-about deal of the year—Indianapolis-based Anthem Inc.’s proposed $54 billion purchase of Connecticut-based Cigna Corp. That’s because the acquisition, announced in July, isn’t expected to close until the second half of 2016. Also pending […]
Many startups, here and elsewhere, secure venture capital funding by touting their market traction, revenue growth and other statistics, all in an effort to prove to investors that they’re good bets. However, a look behind the scenes of High Alpha and three other big venture deals last year suggests that, oftentimes, landing capital has more to do with relationships and luck than with metrics.
What percent of your paper and ink have you devoted to this matter which affects maybe 2-3 percent of the people?
A family dispute over the estate of a well-known heart surgeon and developer in Carmel could delay progress on multiple mixed-use real estate projects in Hamilton and Boone counties.
Prosecutors said Jamie C. Lopez used money from the retirement accounts of his victims to buy automobiles, make mortgage payments and pay for home landscaping.
Midcontinent Independent System Operator Inc. plans to add 84 employees by 2020 after reconfiguring its 133,409-square-foot facility at 720 City Center Drive to increase efficiency.
The Indianapolis Opera will kick off its 2016-17 season with the world premiere adaptation of Kurt Vonnegut Jr.’s play “Happy Birthday, Wanda June” with music by Richard Auldon Clark of Butler University.
Carmel-based Nightingale Home Healthcare Inc. is trying to keep from being kicked out of the federal Medicare program for allegedly putting patients in “immediate jeopardy,” according to documents in a bankruptcy reorganization case the company filed in December.
Officials are laying the groundwork to change the historic status of hundreds of buildings, eliminate industrial use from certain areas, and allow new buildings to tower as high as 75 feet.
Former Aprimo CEO Bill Godfrey, who steered the software company to a $525 million sale in 2010, has assembled some of its other former leaders for a Carmel-based startup.
Chris Waters launched what later became Luna Language Services when he saw the need for qualified interpreters in Indianapolis’ hospitals and courts.
Local officials say the permits are needed now to accommodate development that’s been stymied under a state system that allocates permits based on population.
Since Eric Richards arrived at Cancer Support Community Central Indiana, the group is serving more patients and raising more revenue.
Wes Podell is the senior vice president and a partner at PK Partners, a real estate development firm where he is responsible for leasing, development and investment activities.
The Grand Rapids, Michigan-based grocery and general merchandise chain has filed plans with the city for a 190,000-square-foot store on the southeast corner of Springmill Road and State Road 32.
Millennials are getting older, pairing off, even having a first then a second child, and discovering what their parents and grandparents discovered: a single-family home in a safe neighborhood with strong schools is where they wish to raise their children.
The Indianapolis Public Library has multiplied the amount of media it makes available for free streaming through a partnership with the Hoopla online content service.
Gov. Pence and his religious theories have lost the high road to civility and what is good for Indiana.
The home-health firm’s lawsuit alleges state officials discriminated against the company and CEO Dev Brar when they conducted inspections that led Medicare to terminate payments to the company.