Retired designer turns two condos into one for penthouse over Mass Ave
It was quite a change, to say the least, from the Jim O’Neils’ previous abode—a large but traditional home on 116th Street.
It was quite a change, to say the least, from the Jim O’Neils’ previous abode—a large but traditional home on 116th Street.
Some of Indiana’s most acclaimed technology and entrepreneurial events are joining forces for a multi-day June conference, an effort aimed at boosting venture capital in a state that struggles to draw it.
Rainer Fischer’s goal is to spur collaboration in research and commercialization of life sciences products.
Peter George and Thomas Main, who have helped turn East 16th Street into a culinary corridor, plan to open a Southern eatery in June next to Festiva.
The project will eliminate three of the five existing travel lanes from 116th Street to Main Street, add roundabouts at intersections, install a landscape median through the corridor and put multipurpose paths on both sides of the road.
Developers of The Ardmore told city officials on Wednesday that they hope to start construction in the fall and are seeking city financial assistance on the project.
Indiana’s newest state psychiatric hospital, which is about to rise on the campus of Community Hospital East, is designed to fill a critical gap in the state’s mental health landscape.
The public course, an anchor for the neighborhood bounding West 56th Street in Pike Township, closed in late 2015 after the previous owner defaulted on a $2.4 million bank loan.
Urban Vines has a grand opening scheduled in Westfield, and Rails Craft Brew & Eatery is expected to open later this month in Saxony.
The city is considering eliminating the highway’s Corridor Overlay, which prohibits residential use and restricts retail, parking, and building locations and sizes.
The 101st doesn’t have the same ring to it, but there is no shortage of story lines this May.
IBJ’s Life Sciences Power Breakfast was held April 28, 2017, at the Marriott downtown. Here’s the full transcript.
The struggling supermarket chain warned the state Monday that that it is prepared to close the stores—including 11 in the Indianapolis area—within 60 days if it can't find buyer for the company.
If Marsh’s two downtown stores close, as the struggling grocer has warned could happen within two months, the locations likely would attract interest from rival supermarket operators.
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.
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?
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?
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.
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.
One & Two Penn Mark contain 243,271 square feet of Class A office space, and are 82 percent occupied.