Developer unveils plans for former Central State site
Plans for the proposed $5 million redevelopment show a mix of uses, including student housing, event space, office and industrial space and even the possibility of a brewery.
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Plans for the proposed $5 million redevelopment show a mix of uses, including student housing, event space, office and industrial space and even the possibility of a brewery.
Up against a deadline, Congress passed and sent a waiting President Barack Obama legislation late Wednesday night to avoid a threatened national default and end the 16-day partial government shutdown.
Indiana lawmakers said Wednesday they plan to re-examine a deal that will keep the Amtrak line between Indianapolis and Chicago running for at least another year.
A federal grand jury has returned new charges in a fraud scheme involving the Indy Land Bank, including a wire fraud count against two defendants for allegedly fleecing the victims of a previous real estate scam.
Most remember well the financial crisis that led to the Great Recession. The problems were complex and big, and there were many villains and many more victims.
Corporate account takeovers are high stakes for heists.
Plans from Browning Investments Inc. call for a 35,000-square-foot grocery—earmarked for a Whole Foods—and 104 apartments on the northeast corner of College Avenue and the Central Canal.
Senate leaders announced a last-minute agreement Wednesday to avert a threatened Treasury default and reopen the government after a partial, 16-day shutdown.
Indianapolis police arrested Charles Foster, 33, early Wednesday morning after the man led them on a short chase in a minivan, and then on foot. Police arrived around 1:30 a.m. at the site of a hit-and-run accident at the intersection of East 10th and Rural streets, where they found a bicyclist who had been seriously injured. They saw a minivan believed to be involved in the accident run a red light nearby and gave chase. After crashing into a retaining wall, Foster fled the vehicle. Officers subdued him with pepper spray and took him to Wishard Hospital for evaluation.
A juror was excused Wednesday morning from the trial of Indianapolis police officer David Bisard, after he informed the court of a conversation that might prejudice him against the defendant. Bisard is charged with nine felony counts, including reckless homicide and drunken driving, in the 2010 death of a motorist. Identified as Juror No. 35, seat 9, the man said that after he was selected as a juror, he overheard a co-worker claiming to have inside information about Bisard’s guilt and commenting on Bisard’s drunk-driving charge from earlier this year. Allen County Judge John Surbeck dismissed the juror.
Springleaf Holdings Inc. provides non-prime consumer loans through a network of 834 offices and online.
Indianapolis-based training firm Adayana Inc. said it sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization this week after two years of unsuccessfully trying to restructure its debts out of court.
The move has local radio executives wondering if the comedy show might move up the Indianapolis FM dial as well. Meanwhile, conservative commentator Abdul will switch to weekday evenings on WIBC.
Rather than railing incessantly against Obamacare, Republicans would do themselves and the country a favor if they finally agreed on a common alternative for fixing the health care system.
ExactTarget CEO Scott Dorsey and his team have taken the reins of the Marketing Cloud unit at Salesforce.com, a move that has analysts raving.
Klipsch CEO Paul Jacobs said the Indianapolis-based audio company took a pass on partnering with several other NFL quarterbacks before signing a deal in August with Andrew Luck.
Three central Indiana cities that once had thousands of auto workers have joined together in seeking a $20 million federal grant to help attract new businesses to their empty factories.
Communities on Amtrak's Hoosier State line from Indianapolis to Chicago will help continue the service for at least a year.
Cynthia Simon Skjodt, the daughter of late shopping mall magnate Melvin Simon, is donating $1.5 million to the Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy in honor of her father, the school announced Wednesday morning.
R. Scott Waddell, commissioner of the Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles, will step down Dec. 2, he announced Tuesday.