Kroger lays out plans for 11 former Marsh grocery stores
Kroger said it will first focus on reopening seven of the stores, spending $20 million on renovations.
Kroger said it will first focus on reopening seven of the stores, spending $20 million on renovations.
New eateries are taking root in downtown Indianapolis, Fountain Square, Fishers and Zionsville. And Twenty Tap, south of Broad Ripple, is expected to reopen by the end of the month.
The proposed projects would include purchasing an antique carousel, funding a new clubhouse at Brookshire Golf Club and several road improvement projects.
Tom Battista’s latest project is The Idle, a work-in-progress micro park between Fletcher Place and Fountain Square where visitors can contemplate downtown highway traffic.
Johnny Callison, Dave Concepcion, Randy Johnson are among former Indians who have made big impacts in All-Star games past.
Indianapolis-based Onyx + East plans to build 64 units near 116th Street and College Avenue. It also has a project in the Village of West Clay and is negotiating for land in the heart of the city.
Sherry and David Williams, both in their 50s, work seven days a week to keep their two restaurants and a catering business running.
The 16 Tech innovation district, an ambitious economic development project in the works in Indianapolis for more than a decade, has hired a top executive whose goal is to turn the downtrodden area into a thriving center for entrepreneurship and innovation.
Broad Ripple, Arlington and Northwest high schools are on the chopping block in a plan released Wednesday by Indianapolis Public Schools.
Rather than featuring long, tall aisles like traditional groceries, the new-format stores featured a courtyard in the center with a dozen “boutiques” around the perimeter, each selling a certain category of goods.
United Parcel Service Inc. and the Indiana Economic Development Corp. announced plans for the new 893,000-square-foot package-handling hub Tuesday morning.
Joe Nixon Properties LLC and Gradison Design-Build initially had plans to construct eight single-family residential units near Fishers Elementary School, but the now-$30 million project has grown to 60 homes and could get even larger.
A review committee has recommended the plan to city officials over a proposal submitted by the owner of the liquor store next door.
Chicago-based Level Office, which bought the historic downtown building in January for $11.6 million, later this month will introduce its first private offices for members.
One & Two Penn Mark contain 243,271 square feet of Class A office space, and are 82 percent occupied.
Landlords across Indiana are feeling the pain from the collapse of Marsh Supermarkets, but none more so than a Canadian firm that had as many as 12 of the grocer’s stores in its portfolio.
The project could take shape on property directly adjacent to the City Market, in addition to $8 million in renovations planned to spiff up the Gold Building and a neighboring office complex.
Everyone was talking about the 100th running of the Indianapolis 500 a year ago. But just below the surface was also an underlying fear: What would happen next year?
A coalition of government, business and community groups is posing a big question: How can Indianapolis and surrounding counties best capitalize on the White River?
A homebuilder wants to tear down the vacant, century-old building and construct 34 townhomes on the site, which is in the middle of an area on the rise.