Construction
-Kort Builders has completed a 2,400-square-foot build-out for Coalition Pizza at 365 W. 116th St., Carmel.
-Kort Builders has completed a 3,000-square-foot build-out for Ossip Optometry at 1583 W. Oak St., Zionsville.
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-Kort Builders has completed a 2,400-square-foot build-out for Coalition Pizza at 365 W. 116th St., Carmel.
-Kort Builders has completed a 3,000-square-foot build-out for Ossip Optometry at 1583 W. Oak St., Zionsville.
Gregory Polanco is a special player. It won’t be long before he’s called up to the Majors.
Meyer Najem Construction executives Kevin McGovern and Chris McCracken have become partners at the company. McGovern is vice president of institutional projects and McCracken is vice president of health care.
-CISolutions leased 20,307 square feet of industrial space at 3169 N. Shadeland Ave. The tenant was represented by Bryan Augustin of Alliance Commercial Group. The landlord, First Industrial Realty Trust, was represented by Todd Vannatta of Cassidy Turley.
-3xLogic Inc. leased 14,182 square feet of industrial space at 9880-9896 E. 121st St., Fishers. The tenant was represented by Bryan Poynter of Cassidy Turley. The landlord, Duke Realty Corp., was represented by Duke's Kate Willen Ems.
-Electric Power Systems International Inc. leased 4,000 square feet at the Pendleton Trade Center, 3912 Pendleton Way. The tenant was represented by Derek Menerey and Ashley Bussell of Newmark Knight Frank Halakar. The landlord, Mann Properties, was represented by Debbie Mann.
-Fishers Imports subleased the 3,500-square-foot former Key Bank branch on 126th Street, Fishers. The tenant was represented by Chris Hake of Thompson Thrift Development. The sublandlord, Key Bank, was represented by Jared Kately of JLL.
-Ultra Athlete LLC leased 3,500 square feet of office space at 11595 N. Meridian St., Carmel. The tenant was represented by Christopher Carmen of Carmen Commercial Real Estate Services Inc. The landlord, eSkye Solutions Inc., was represented by Michael Semler of Cassidy Turley.
-CIMA Energy LTD leased 2,657 square feet of space at 9245 N. Meridian St. The tenant was represented by Kelly Williams of ReMax. The landlord, Echo Associates LLC, was represented by Ralph Balber and Ashley Bussell of Newmark Knight Frank Halakar.
-ManpowerGroup US Inc. leased 2,386 square feet of office space at 11350 N. Meridian St., Carmel. The tenant was represented by Spud Dick of Cassidy Turley. The landlord, HUB Properties GA LLC, was represented by Thomas Hadley and Matt Waggoner of Summit Realty Group.
-VFA Inc. leased 2,150 square feet of office space at 8365 Keystone Crossing. The tenant was represented by Andrew Follman of NAI Meridian Real Estate Services. The landlord, Jim Sourwine, was represented by Andrew Martin and Bennett Williams of Cassidy Turley.
-BoMar Pneumatics leased 1,800 square feet of industrial space at 5755-5857 W. 74th St. The landlord, CrossLake Properties LLC, was represented by Todd Vannatta and Fritz Kauffman of Cassidy Turley. The tenant represented itself.
-Brew By U leased 1,600 square feet at Meridian Meadows, 3021 Meridian Meadows Road, Greenwood. The tenant was represented by Barbara Dunn-Stear of KW Commercial, Indy Metro Partners. The landlord, Meridian Meadows LLC, was represented by Keith Fried of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate.
-Indiana Medical Weight Loss LLC bought a 4,432-square-foot medical office building at 12050 N. Michigan Road, Zionsville. The buyer was represented by Keith Claghorn of Sycamore Group. The seller, Forty One Corp., was represented by Bob Lindgren of Lee & Associates.
-Realty Income Properties bought the 62,707-square-foot Gander Mountain Store at 1049 Emerson Ave., Greenwood. The buyer was represented by Brian F. Knapp and Janice Paine of Colliers International offices in Indianapolis and Cincinnati. The seller, Indigan Inc., represented itself.
Answers: Coma, Troll, Bra, Dieter, Great aunt, Prop, Ask out, Eloi, Horror, Narc, Lore
The greater success Interactive Intelligence enjoys transitioning customers to the cloud, the greater the drag on short-term results.
The $26 million International Orangutan Center at the Indianapolis Zoo is scheduled to open to the public Saturday. Zoo officials expect a tremendous attendance boost from the exhibit.
Two executives with the Evansville-based lender received big stock awards in connection with the company’s IPO. The awards put the pair No. 1 and No. 2 on IBJ’s list of highest-paid Hoosier executives.
The hard-to-please New York Times puzzle editor has earned this high Hoosier honor.
Can you be between one thing? Not according to spell check,But I’m guessing grammarians aren’t the primary audience for Between the Bun.
Disney destroyed Broadway. Disney saved Broadway. You hear both sides.
The popularity of target-date funds has attracted a bevy of providers fighting for market share, many trying to differentiate themselves by using unconventional strategies. This has led to wildly different performance for funds with the same target date.
A promise of nearly infinite health care to any large group of people has a nearly infinite cost.
The mother of an Indianapolis man shot at a Kroger by a store manager in what police said was an attempted robbery filed the suit in 2012.
Already squeezed by tough competition from online retailers like Amazon.com and discount stores like Wal-Mart and Target, retailers like Best Buy and Sears have been cutting costs and revamping merchandise and store formats to attract customers.
Confession: 25 years ago, during my lunch breaks, I began listening to a newly syndicated radio talk show. The host, Rush Limbaugh, was anathema to everything I believe. But while his opinions were outrageous, his delivery was delectable.
A while back, we wrote about Gov. Pence’s efforts to use federal health care dollars for our state’s successful Healthy Indiana Plan, rather than expanding the failure that is Medicaid.