TRY THIS: Swing time at new TopGolf in Fishers
High-tech attraction offers opportunity for duffers and pros to play together without frustrating each other.
High-tech attraction offers opportunity for duffers and pros to play together without frustrating each other.
The North Carolina-based chain signed on as the anchor tenant to a key $42 million apartment and retail project in July 2014.
The nearly 22,000-square-foot grocery is part of the chain’s aggressive renovation and expansion campaign. Also in the roundup: three new eateries, two salons, two boutiques and two dentist offices.
Downtown gets a new grocery and taco restaurant; a seafood restaurant makes a move in Zionsville; Keystone Crossing lands new pizza place; and a midtown diner closes after four months.
The owners of a 16-year-old pizza and sandwich eatery in Carmel say the massive U.S. 31 reconstruction project “gutted” their business, leaving them with no choice but to close.
The pizza purveyor’s move to establish a south-side location mirrors the plans of Portillo’s, another Chicagoland staple that recently entered the Indianapolis market with a north-side restaurant.
The explosive growth in craft breweries is starting to slow in Indiana, and a smattering of players have gone out of business. Yet industry observers remain bullish on the market.
The Castleton mainstay is branching out to Hamilton County and taking the space of Casler’s Kitchen and Bar, which closed on Wednesday.
Owners of the east-side hangout hope to replicate their success on Southport Road, albeit with more burgers. Meanwhile, Portillo’s has vaulted a hurdle for its location on U.S. 31 South.
West Fork Whiskey looks to complement Cannonball Brewing on Bellefontaine, and the New Zealand burger joint nails down its second Indy locale. Plus, pancakes in Irvington.
In September, the Carmel Board of Zoning Appeals denied a variance request from Forrest and Charlotte Lucas to allow for large gatherings on their massive West 116th Street estate. That decision hasn’t stopped the parties.
The machine, manufactured by Germany-based Siemens, will be used at IU Health’s Neuroscience Center at 16th Street and Capitol Avenue, primarily for oncology and neuroscience patients.
The chain is sinking nearly $2 million into revamping the location. The turnaround will be finished soon, and Kroger’s other former Marsh stores should be open by late March.
If Noble Roman’s Craft Pizza & Pub takes off, the company might franchise dozens of restaurants across the state.
The Chicago legend is sure to please loyalists. Newcomers may wonder what the fuss is all about.
The project, which could include nearly 1 million square feet of higher-end retail, would be developed by locally based Gershman Partners.
The Monon16 area on the near-north side is the first to be selected as part of Lift Indy, designed to deliver concentrated doses of federal community development funds.
The three-story, 65,000-square-foot sports-entertainment complex isn’t waiting long for the hubbub to subside over the openings of its across-the-street neighbors from Sweden and Chicago.
Since 2014, developers have invested nearly $90 million between three projects on the north side of 116th Street in Fishers. Now, the south side—mostly lined with small, one-story retail buildings and parking lots—could see a similar boom.
We’re sympathetic to the concerns of the neighbors, but the generosity Forrest and Charlotte Lucas show by holding fundraisers for not-for-profits at their Carmel estate is worth preserving.