Chase Tower’s $201M sale price sets record
A publicly traded real estate investment trust has agreed to pay $201 million for the tallest building in Indiana, a price that could give a boost to the local investment market.
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A publicly traded real estate investment trust has agreed to pay $201 million for the tallest building in Indiana, a price that could give a boost to the local investment market.
The 13-mile, $600 million upgrade of U.S. 31 that carves through some of Hamilton County’s fastest-growing suburbs is a temporary inconvenience to motorists, but for some business owners it’s a life—or livelihood—altering event.
There is a great (and vituperative) disagreement on government’s role in stabilizing a recession.
Google Earth is one of Google’s odder and spottier applications. It started life as Keyhole, a 3-D mapping program originally paid for by the CIA and subsequently purchased by Google in 2004.
The mission of the Jubilee Village Project is to provide hope, opportunity and liberty to villages around the world.
I always have had a soft spot for basketball referees.
Third in a month-long series of “Grill” restaurant reviews. This week: Grille 39.
A bodybuilder looking for love, high-wire walkers and super heroines are among my favorites at this year’s Indianapolis International Film Festival, set for July 19-29.
An Indianapolis judge has ordered a Phoenix-based home rental company to pay nearly $218,000 for not providing promised services before the Super Bowl last February.
Woodland Animal Hospital owner will take former bookstore space in Chatham Arch neighborhood.
New housing, health facility could help attract grocer.
Event organizers say Wall Street isn’t the only place to drum up interest in stocks.
It’s not clear if the car dealer would leave its long-time home on West 38th Street.
“Cabaret” at the Athenaeum? The open of Indy Reads Books? What did you attend this weekend?
Lyle Lovett & His Acoustic Group comes to the Murat Theatre July 22. Details here.
The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra celebrates the best of Broadway with Symphony on the Prairie concerts July 20-21. Details here.
American Pianists Association fellowship finalist Jeremy Siskind performs at the Jazz Kitchen July 24. Details here.
Storyteller Celestine Bloomfield anchors July 19th’s Museum Nights on the Canal, a free evening of activities near the Indiana Historical Society. Details here.
Cathy Day, author of “The Circus in Winter,” is the author guest at Indy Reads Books July 19. Details here.
Through July 22
Indiana Convention Center
Last week, I told you about just some of the activities planned for this year’s Summer Celebration. This week, let me encourage you not to overbook so that you have time to stroll the convention center to visit the Artist Market and Author’s Parlor, the health fair, the performances by Asante Children’s Theatre in the Family Fun Zone, the gallery of work by Herron School of Art & Design faculty, students and alumni, and the rest of the aisles and aisles of options at the Convention Center. Full schedule here.
July 19-29
Indianapolis Museum of Art
Click here and you’ll find a rundown of some of my favorite films from this year’s festival, ranging from a documentary about Detroit’s economic woes to a fiction film concerning a gentle bodybuilder looking for love. Take your pick, order up some popcorn, and enjoy an event that’s as much about sharing your opinions between screenings as it is about watching films. Full schedule here.
July 20-22
White River State Park
Call me Othello, but I’m jealous. That’s because I’m going to be out of town this weekend and, unlike you, won’t have a chance to see the return of Shakespeare in the Park, courtesy of Heartland Actors Repertory Theatre. After a one-year hiatus, the professional company is back with a cast of some of Indy’s leading actors, including David Alan Anderson and Ryan Artzberger. And it’s free. Details here.