Apartment-building blitz reshapes Broad Ripple
Broad Ripple is wrapping up a prolific six-year stretch during which developers have spent more than $125 million to bring nearly 800 new apartments to the neighborhood.
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Broad Ripple is wrapping up a prolific six-year stretch during which developers have spent more than $125 million to bring nearly 800 new apartments to the neighborhood.
As with any investment, price is what you pay, but value is what you get.
The Securities and Exchange Commission under President Trump isn’t known for its aggressiveness. As a Reuters analysis recently highlighted, the nation’s “top market cop is slowly taking the shackles off corporations,” in the hope that relaxed regulation will help reverse a 20-year decline in the number of U.S. public company listings. But we’re glad to […]
The collapse of the business model that sustained local newspapers is well-known; the consequences, however, are only beginning to be appreciated.
Upcoming research from Purdue University indicates that local tax revenue generated by new homeowners doesn’t keep up with added costs of services.
Gary Varvel’s statements regarding man not being able to destroy the climate because God would not allow it is putting way too much of a burden on God for the failures of man.
I respect Varvel’s faith and his right to speak his own opinion. But it is his opinion, entirely disconnected from facts.
A naive belief that God will act in the 11th hour to reverse human-caused damage allows the so-called faithful to remain complacent and to continue “business as usual” in the irresponsible exploitation of Earth’s resources.
For the past three sessions, I’ve pushed for legislation that would prevent homeowners associations from restricting the placement or use of solar panels.
As promised, this is the last of almost 500 regularly scheduled IBJ columns. My assistant Susan and I trashed the “fat file,” the one on issues and ideas we have maintained for the last 25 years.
Founded in 1983, the practice has 28 physicians and annual revenue of $35 million, and shows little sign of slowing.
Starting out in 2005 with just four sets of sunglass frames, the eyeglass company now offers five lines for men and women with more than 100 frame styles.
You can learn a lot about your organization by asking a few questions about what people might add to their space.
The Columbia Club formed in 1889 and had two homes on Monument Circle before the group spent $827,000 to construct the 10-story clubhouse it still uses today.
Indianapolis Monthly is not abandoning print. But the 42-year-old magazine is making a serious push into digital in an effort to grow its reach—and eventually revenue.
Indianapolis’ part-time city-county councilors are paid significantly less than officials with the same positions in comparable cities across the nation
The retirement community operator had revenue of $51.4 million last year, up 4% from 2017, according to its Form 990 tax return.
From wide perspective, decreasing fertility rates exacerbate the problem of slowing population growth. From the individual’s perspective, they reflect continued positive economic trends.
Before we get to the fluky set of circumstances that got Barry Collier to Butler in the first place and meet the man who made it happen, let’s establish a premise: Without Collier, there is no Butler Way.