16 Park project helping to transform Indianapolis neighborhood
The first building of a new complex on near-north side is set to be completed in August
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The first building of a new complex on near-north side is set to be completed in August
The North of South mixed-use project in downtown Indianapolis is just the latest development for Brad Chambers, who started out in the landscaping business.
A total of 220 life sciences startups have been launched in Indiana since 2004, or an average of 44 per year, according to a new report from BioCrossroads that tracked the industry’s growth over the last eight years.
Citizens Action Coalition Education Fund and Indiana Legal Services Inc. claim that “a good number” of Indianapolis south-side residents who should have qualified for reduced or waived bills at St. Francis were instead steered into payments plans.
Brownsburg police nabbed an estimated $2 million worth of marijuana after they pulled over two men for speeding near 56th Street and Interstate 465. Chad Jobe and Delton Hinderliter are now out on bond on drug-dealing charges after being arrested last Friday. Police found 1,000 pounds of pot wrapped up in cellophane bundles inside the bed of the pickup truck the two were driving.
One person was injured Wednesday morning following a seven-car, chain-reaction accident in Fishers at State Road 37 near 126th Street. Initial reports said the southbound lane of SR 37 was shut down temporarily. The area is plagued by heavy rush-hour traffic.
A gunman opened fire at a south-side Indianapolis gas station early Wednesday morning in an apparent robbery attempt, leaving a 24-year-old male victim with a gunshot wound to the chest. The victim was taken to Methodist Hospital in serious condition but he is expected to survive. The incident happened at a Phillips 66 station, 3139 Kentucky Ave., about 1 a.m.
Berry Plastics Corp. plans to add 120 office jobs at its Evansville headquarters as it consolidates operations there.
Japanese manufacturer Nidec Motor Corp. plans to close its facility in Frankfort, eliminating 94 jobs in the Clinton County community.
A deep round of layoffs at The Indianapolis Star is only the beginning of a major restructuring of the company's news operations, Publisher Karen Crotchfelt told IBJ in an interview Wednesday.
Think Global, which has a factory in Elkhart and uses batteries made in the Indianapolis area, plans to liquidate its assets, according to supplier Ener1 Inc. Ener1 expects to lose $32 million in the process.
Wishard Health Services will change its name to Eskenazi Health after receiving a $40 million gift from Indianapolis real estate developer Sidney Eskenazi and his wife Lois, the county-owned hospital announced Wednesday morning.
The Orestes-based company—the nation’s second-largest tomato canner—on Tuesday announced plans to invest $3.5 million to convert a former Elwood elementary school into a new corporate headquarters.
The lab has been run out of Indiana University and has produced increasing numbers of incorrect test results over a period from roughly 2003 to 2008.
Anthem Blue Cross, an affiliate of WellPoint Inc., has agreed to settle a lawsuit that accused the health insurer of manipulating policies and forcing patients into higher deductible policies with fewer benefits.
The Indianapolis Star on Tuesday laid off 62 employees including more than 15 percent of its newsroom staff in the latest round of cost-cutting by Gannett Co. Inc., the newspaper's parent company.
Indiana Secretary of State Charlie White painted a picture of himself as a man with a complicated personal life that led him to use dual addresses but he denied ever providing false information as he defended himself Tuesday against voter fraud allegations.