Roundup: Ryan White’s letters, Storefront Theatre’s first project, more
Plus IMA’s summer movies and the latest offerings from BroadwayHD.
Plus IMA’s summer movies and the latest offerings from BroadwayHD.
After hitting it big south of Indianapolis, owners of the brewpub plan to open a second location in mid-June in a town aggressively pursuing development.
The local company considered buying its current home before hitting the drawing board and launching plans to build its own space.
Over six years, the state has spent more than a half billion dollars on vouchers. During that time, Indiana’s program has expanded, giving more students access to vouchers than in any other state—despite mixed evidence from researchers that vouchers help students achieve.
It was quite a change, to say the least, from the Jim O’Neils’ previous abode—a large but traditional home on 116th Street.
City officials are scrapping plans to help finance construction of a long-awaited 21c hotel proposed as part of a $55 million redevelopment of Old City Hall and are putting the property back up for bid.
MoFoCo, formerly the Monon Food Co., plans to open a downtown location March 27, while Bob’s Discount Furniture prepares to launch from two stores formerly occupied by a local furniture heavyweight.
Plus Keith Lockhart and the Boston Pops play Gershwin at the Palladium.
Train, trail or both? That’s the debate in Hamilton County involving officials from Fishers and Noblesville and the Indiana Transportation Museum.
The 315-room hotel, built in 1998 at Keystone at the Crossing, now boasts several amenities and improvements that give it a more modern feel.
The rest issue has been an even hotter-than-usual talking point in the NBA of late with teams like Golden State and Cleveland electing to rest superstars in recent nationally televised games.
The museum is expected to close to the public for the $30 million renovation May 14. The target for reopening is the fall semester of 2019.
IBJ hosted its annual Technology Power Breakfast on March 16. IBJ technology reporter Jared Council moderated a discussion that included ClearObject CEO John McDonald, Ice Miller CEO Kristine Camron, Sticksnleaves Vice President Kristen Cooper, Emplify CEO Santiago Jaramillo, Torchlite CEO Susan Marshall, and Indiana Chamber of Commerce Vice President Mark Lawrance.
It’s tough to say where DemandJump would be without Tyler Foxworthy, the 27-year-old Hoosier who is chief architect of the firm’s artificial intelligence software. He’s the brains behind the algorithms.
In hospitals and clinics around Indiana, specialized nurses with advanced degrees and extensive training are booming in numbers.
Just because nothing has yet emerged as a candidate to create chaos for lawmakers in the 2017 session doesn’t mean things will stay sedate.
The idea of one-ways, particularly in cities like Indy, spawned from the “Get in, get out, get to the highway” mentality of post-World War II transportation thinking.
Several local companies and people presented at South by Southwest in Texas this week, sharing their Hoosier experiences and products with a variety of audiences at the world-renowned tech and arts confab.
Of the top five contributions from Indianapolis-area donors, four set records as the largest the organization had ever received from an individual.