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Indiana Landmarks still trying to save pre-Civil War home
The Cotton-Ropkey House was built in 1850 and features Greek Revival and Italianate features, including six-over-six windows, walnut floors and crown moldings.
Q&A
Alph Bingham spent more than 28 years at Eli Lilly and Co. and from there co-founded InnoCentive Inc., a Massachusetts-based organization that organizes crowdsourcing to help companies solve internal challenges. The Carmel resident spoke about the challenges now facing pharmaceutical companies, which are buckling under ever-rising costs to develop drugs with lower rates of success and worsening prospects for reimbursement. Bingham’s solution is for pharma to embrace crowdsourcing and other “open innovation” concepts in order to spread the risk of R&D among more partners.
People
The School of Science at IUPUI hired Nigel Richards as chairman of the department of chemistry and chemical biology. Richards, who previously worked for 21 years at the University of Florida, specializes in the study of enzymes. Richards earned his doctorate in organic chemistry from Cambridge University in 1984.
Andrew Rosenberg has been appointed to lead Mercer’s Health & Benefits business in Indianapolis. Rosenberg joined Mercer in 2006. He holds an MBA from the Indiana University Kelley School of Business and a bachelor’s degree in management from Anderson University.
Indiana University Health named Bill McConnell its chief information officer. Most recently, McConnell was CEO of an Indianapolis startup, FlowCo Inc. Before that, he was a senior vice president of Boston Scientific Cardiac Rhythm Management in St. Paul, Minn., and before that the CIO for Indianapolis-based Guidant Corp. McConnell also worked as a managing partner for Arthur Andersen in Indianapolis.
Company news
WellPoint Inc. director Lenox Baker said there is no move on the company’s board to oust CEO Angela Braly even after an institutional investor said last week she needs to go. “Angela, I think, has done a great job,” Baker, a retired cardiac surgeon, told Bloomberg News. “Quite frankly, I think some of this stuff with the company is coming from Wall Street. I’m much more looking to the future.” WellPoint, the second-biggest U.S. health insurer, reported earnings last month that missed analyst estimates, said it would lose 900,000 members, and reduced its 2012 forecast. Those announcements prompted Leon Cooperman, whose hedge fund Omega Advisors owns 2.1 million WellPoint shares, to tell Bloomberg: “There’s a universal view that the CEO is the wrong CEO to lead the business.” Since Braly became chairwoman of WellPoint in 2010, the company’s stock price has fallen 8.5 percent. During the same time, Minnesota-based UnitedHealth Group has seen its stock rise 53 percent. The results “put an exclamation point on the differences between United and WellPoint,” Carl McDonald, a Citigroup analyst in New York, wrote in a note to clients. “Time may be running out for WellPoint’s management team.”
Eli Lilly and Co. will receive more than $1.2 billion in early payments from its former drug development partner Amylin Pharmaceuticals Inc. The payments come after Lilly competitor Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. finished its $5 billion acquisition of Amylin. Indianapolis-based Lilly partnered with California-based Amylin to launch the diabetes drugs Byetta and Bydureon. But a dispute arose between the two companies after Lilly launched another diabetes drug, Tradjenta, in partnership with Germany-based Boehringer Ingelheim GmbH. Lilly intends to use the Amylin payments to pay development costs of new drugs it hopes to bring to market.
Dr. Craig Brater will retire in June next year as dean of the Indiana University School of Medicine, he announced Wednesday, and the school has formed a committee to find his replacement. Brater, 66, has worked at the Indianapolis-based school for 26 years, including the past 12 as dean. The school is the second-largest medical school in the nation and the only one in Indiana. Brater oversees a massive operation that includes a main campus in Indianapolis and eight satellite campuses throughout the state. The medical school had a budget of nearly $426 million in the last school year, up 30 percent over the past five years. It employs 1,900 professors who oversee a total student body of 1,880 and also serves doctors at five hospitals in Indianapolis, including Wishard Memorial Hospital, the Roudebush Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and IU Health’s University Hospital and Riley Hospital for Children. Brater is a native of Oak Ridge, Tenn. He attended undergraduate and medical school at Duke University. Before IU, he was part of the faculty at the University of California at San Francisco and worked for the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center.
EMR causes hospital wait times to soar
Columbus Regional Hospital saw wait times double in its emergency room after it began using electronic records in late June, according to the Associated Press. Even now, wait times are longer than usual, even though they have lessened.
Construction
-Capitol Construction has completed a 17,000-square-foot build-out for Little Star Autism Center at 12650 Hamilton Crossing, Carmel.
-Capitol Construction has completed a 4,000-square-foot office build-out for Health & Human Services at 101 W. Ohio St.
Residential
The average rate for 30-year mortgages rose from 3.77 percent to 3.81 percent in the week ended Aug. 8, according to Bankrate.com. The rate for 15-year mortgages rose from 2.99 percent to 3 percent.
Leases/leasing contracts
-LifeScience Logistics LLC leased 132,000 square feet of industrial space at 1105 E. Northfield Drive, Brownsburg. The tenant was represented by Thomas Cooler of CBRE. The landlord, KTR Capital Partners, was represented by Bart Book and Luke Wessel of Cassidy Turley.
-Push Logistics leased 46,800 square feet of industrial space at 2525 N. Shadeland Ave. The tenant was represented by Mark Writt of CBRE. The landlord, NCI Acquisitions, was represented by Michael Weishaar and Todd Vannatta of Cassidy Turley.
-BDP International leased 19,642 square feet of industrial space at 5601 Fortune Circle South. The tenant was represented by Todd Vannatta and Michael Weishaar of Cassidy Turley. The landlord, CW Capital Asset Management LLC, was represented by J.D. Graves of CBRE.
-Miguel Cardenas, dba Chispas, leased 19,260 square feet of retail space at Lafayette Shoppes, 38th Street and Georgetown Road. The tenant was represented by Larry W. Harshman of Harshman Property Services LLC. The landlord, Lafayette Shoppes LP, was represented by Jim Mosher of The Broadbent Co.
-Performance Assessment Network Inc. renewed its lease for 16,704 square feet at 11590 N. Meridian St., Carmel. The tenant was represented by Yumi Prater and R.J. Rudolph of Colliers International. The landlord, Fidelity Office Building II LP, was represented by Mike Napariu of REI Real Estate Services LLC.
-The Bang Fitness Project LLC leased 10,000 square feet of retail space at Cool Creek Commons, 2510 E. 146th St., Carmel. The tenant was represented by Kim Estes Hartman, Tom Osborne, and R.J. Rudolph of Colliers International. The landlord, Westfield One LLC, was represented by Andrew Hasbrook of Kite Realty Group.
-USAwning Network leased 5,400 square feet of warehouse space at Brookside Industrial Park at East 16th Street and Sherman Drive. The landlord, Brookside Industrial Park LLC, was represented by Russ Zimmerman of NAI Meridian and Larry W. Harshman of Harshman Property Services LLC. The Tenant represented itself.
-It’s a Kid’s World Ministry Academy leased 5,000 square feet of retail space at 2151 N. Franklin Road. The tenant was represented by Joe Lonnemann of Ambrose Property Group. The landlord, Franklin Road LLC, represented itself.
-SK Huffer & Associates PC leased 4,035 square feet of office space in the Village of West Clay at 12821 E. New Market St., Carmel. The tenant was represented by Gerald Kosene of Kosene & Kosene. The landlord, CFS LLS, was represented by Joe Lonnemann of Ambrose Property Group.
-Bakery Euromex LLC leased 2,150 square feet of retail space at Grant Plaza Shopping Center, 3103-B Lafayette Road. The tenant was represented by Camilo Colonia of Equity Wealth Realty. The landlord, Harshman & Hays LLC, was represented by Larry W. Harshman of Harshman Property Services LLC.
-Herbalife Nutrition and Weight Management leased 1,700 square feet of retail space at Grant Plaza Shopping Center, 3103-A Lafayette Road. The landlord, Harshman & Hays LLC, was represented by Larry W. Harshman of Harshman Property Services LLC. The tenant represented itself.
-Hott Komoditty Hair Salon leased 1,502 square feet of retail space at Grant Plaza Shopping Center, 3037 Lafayette Road. The tenant was represented by Gregg C. Donaldson of Milhaus Realty LLC. The landlord, Harshman & Hays LLC, was represented by Larry W. Harshman of Harshman Property Services LLC.
-Crown Product Services LLC leased 1,143 square feet of office space in the Village of West Clay at 12821 E. New Market St., Carmel. The landlord, CFS LLS, was represented by Joe Lonnemann of Ambrose Property Group. The tenant represented itself.
-Bogdanoff Henderson PC and Dages and Co. leased 1,064 square foot of office space at Four Parkwood, 500 E. 96th St. The tenant was represented by Ed Freeman of Freeman Commercial Development Inc. The landlords, Philip and Janet Clark, were represented by Kim Estes Hartman, Tom Osborne, and R.J. Rudolph of Colliers International.
-Breathe Life Yoga leased 1,000 square feet of office space at 8202 Clearvista Parkway. The landlord, Regency Centre Investments, was represented by Joe Lonnemann of Ambrose Property Group. The tenant represented itself.
Sales/acquisitions
-Plastic Recycling Inc. bought a 105,000-square-foot industrial building at 1910 S. State Ave. The buyer was represented by Ron Coble of Coble Properties. The seller, E&A Holdings, was represented by Brian Buschuk, Jake Sturman, Brian Seitz and Steve Schwegman of Jones Lang LaSalle.
-Central Indiana Periodontics PC bought one acre of land at 8301 Rockville Road. The buyer was represented by Gary Bieberich of Sell4Free Cash Back Realty. The seller, Cloverleaf Property Group LLC, was represented by Jason Alsup and Allen Culpepper of RE/MAX Centerstone.
-TEG Stone Ridge LLC bought the 320-unit Stone Ridge Apartments at 7111 Vedder Place. The seller, Stone Ridge I & II LLC, was represented by Scott Pollom of Cassidy Turley. The buyer represented itself.
-PP Indy 3 LLC bought the 198-unit Vineyards at Apple Creek Apartments at 10101 Montery Road. The sellers, Circle Millennium Limited Partnership and Condomania Limited Partnership, were represented by Scott Pollom of Cassidy Turley. The buyer represented itself.
Survey: Reform threatens retail, hospitality
Nearly half of employers in the sectors expect the Patient Protection & Affordable Care Act to boost their health plan costs more than 3 percent in 2014.
Five injured in stagecoach mishap
Officials say one person was hospitalized overnight after being hurt when a stagecoach tipped over before an Indiana State Fair horse show. Altogether, five people—two state fair queens and three judges—were taken to a hospital with minors injuries after the crash Sunday afternoon inside the fairgrounds coliseum. The driver of the coach was uninjured.
House fire under investigation
Arson investigators were on the scene of a fire in the 4000 block of East 42nd Street Monday morning that caused heavy damage to a vacant house. Indianapolis fire officials estimate the fire broke out about 2 a.m. and caused at least $125,000 in damages. A neighbor told investigators the home was in foreclosure and had been vacant about three weeks.
Fair plans to honor concert victims
The one-year anniversary of the stage-collapse tragedy at the Indiana State Fair will be marked by a moment of silence Monday. Officials said all activity on the fairgrounds will shut down at 8:46 p.m., the time investigators say the first emergency call came in last year. Seven people died and 58 were injured in the tragedy. A plaque memorializing the victims was placed beneath the grandstand on Main Street.
Luck will sell Colts tickets, but won’t make fans forget No. 18
Luck’s stellar preseason debut against the St. Louis Rams Sunday isn’t so much about making people forget about Manning—Indianapolis will never forget No. 18—as much as it is getting the team’s fan base focused on the future.
Ex-Star editor hopes to do communications consulting
Dennis Ryerson, who stepped down as editor June 1, said he was not pressured to leave after arrival of his successor, but acknowledged there was some “tension.”
Latest CIB budget contains no new payments to Pacers
Payments on a three-year, $30 million subsidy ended this year, but discussions continue between CIB officials and Pacers officials on future leases involving Bankers Life Fieldhouse.
U.S. 31 project leaves many living in uncertainty
The new U.S. 31 highway project is designed to make travel faster and safer between South Bend and Indianapolis, but many aren’t happy with the property-acquisition process.
WellPoint board member says Braly still backed as CEO
A WellPoint Inc. director said there’s no move by the board to fire CEO Angela Braly for poor performance. Meanwhile, an expert predicted Braly will have at least until early 2013 to right the ship as the company awaits the close of the $4.9 billion Amerigroup acquisition.