U.S. 31 upgrade might begin in fall, INDOT says
INDOT said Wednesday it has awarded a $141 million contract for upgrades between 96th and 136th streets in Carmel to a joint venture between E&B Paving Inc. of Anderson and Gradex Inc. of Indianapolis.
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INDOT said Wednesday it has awarded a $141 million contract for upgrades between 96th and 136th streets in Carmel to a joint venture between E&B Paving Inc. of Anderson and Gradex Inc. of Indianapolis.
As part of its annual National Preservation Conference, to be held this fall in Indianapolis for the first time, the group plans to explore reuses for the vacant but historic building during a day-long event.
The Carmel City Center building that housed Shapiro’s Delicatessen for more than a decade is for sale following the restaurant’s June closure.
A federal judge in New York has slapped HDG Mansur with a $5.8 million judgment, ruling in favor of a former client that said the Indianapolis real estate firm misappropriated funds.
By and large, Obamacare will leave in place the same major problems in the health care systems that existed before the law was passed—in both Indiana and across the nation.
Homelessness among Indiana military veterans increased this year while the number of homeless families with dependent children fell by nearly a quarter from last year, according to a statewide count released Wednesday.
Indiana officials have found evidence of "manipulation" in the state's school grading formula as part of a review stemming from a grade-changing scandal.
The two buildings, one totaling 475,000 square feet and the other 450,000 square feet, are set to be built on 52 acres in Plainfield that Opus has owned since 2008.
Logan Anthony Armendariz, 13, died Monday afternoon in Anderson after being accidentally shot by a younger family member, police say. Armendariz, of Middletown, suffered a single gunshot wound to the chest. The victim, an incoming seventh-grader at Daleville Junior-Senior High, was an honor roll student who played basketball and baseball.
A high diver was hurt while performing a stunt at the Indiana State Fair on Tuesday night. The diver fell from about 15 feet during the Sinbad High Dive Show after losing control during a handstand. He was taken to the hospital with injuries to his face and hands.
A 9-year-old girl was seriously injured Wednesday morning when she was struck by a car while waiting at her bus stop in Whiteland. Johnson County police say a repair shop employee was taking the car for a test ride on Whiteland Road near Graham Road when he struck the girl while pulling into a driveway. Medics say the girl was conscious and speaking despite her injuries.
Attorneys for 21st Amendment have filed a motion to intervene in the suit filed by the Indiana Petroleum Marketers and Convenience Store Association and several store owners.
The dispute started in October when the lender tried to take possession of the building at the southwest corner of 49th Street and College Avenue. Now the owner has filed Chapter 11 to delay foreclosure proceedings.
An agreement meant to keep a popular amusement park in the family has sparked a bitter dispute that has reached the Indiana Court of Appeals.
Shares of Calumet Specialty Products Partners LP dropped as much as 8 percent early Wednesday after the Indianapolis-based company reported a dramatic decline in profit in the second quarter.
The state hopes to start converting the 21-mile stretch of interstate early next year. The project is estimated to cost $394 million.
Shares of Pendleton-based Remy International Inc. closed at a 52-week high Tuesday, a day after the manufacturer announced declining sales and earnings in the second quarter.
California-based K1 Speed Inc. hopes to open a high-tech electric kart-racing center in Noblesville in late September. But first, it needs the city’s permission to locate an indoor recreation business in the Saxony Corporate Campus near I-69.
Marcia Barnes, who took over as CEO of one of the state's largest private companies 15 months ago, has left the firm.
CTB/McGraw-Hill, the second-largest educational testing service in the U.S., has apologized for computer issues that disrupted thousands of students’ online tests in Oklahoma and Indiana in late April.