Residential
The average rate for 30-year mortgages fell from 4.14 percent to 4.12 percent for the week ended June 19, according to Bankrate.com. The rate for 15-year mortgages slipped from 3.32 percent to 3.3 percent.
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The average rate for 30-year mortgages fell from 4.14 percent to 4.12 percent for the week ended June 19, according to Bankrate.com. The rate for 15-year mortgages slipped from 3.32 percent to 3.3 percent.
-OHL renewed its lease for 379,332 square feet at 1101 Whitaker Road, Plainfield. The tenant was represented by Andrew Morris, Jeremy Woods and Andrea Hopper of Summit Realty Group and Steve Schwegman of Jones Lang LaSalle. The landlord, Transpacific Development Co., represented itself.
-SKH (Shaughnessy Kniep Hawe) Paper leased 42,500 square feet of industrial space at 2363-2383 Perry Road, Plainfield. The tenant was represented by Sean McHale of Colliers International. The landlord, Clarion Partners, was represented by Fritz Kauffman and Bryan Poynter of Cassidy Turley.
-National Hail and Dent Removal LLC leased 18,375 square feet of industrial space at 551 Earlywood Drive, Franklin. Both the tenant and landlord, Wertz Realty LLC, were represented by Don Treibic of Cassidy Turley.
-Sensory Technologies leased 17,492 square feet of industrial space at 6911-7061 Corporate Circle. The tenant was represented by Jake Sturman of Jones Lang LaSalle. The landlord, GI Partners, was represented by Bryan Poynter and Russell Van Til of Cassidy Turley.
-Cork Medical LLC leased 8,805 square feet of office space at 6406 Castleway Court. The tenant was represented by Matt Waggoner of Summit Realty Group. The landlord, NorthStar Realty Finance Corp., was represented by Dave Moore and Darrin Boyd of Cassidy Turley.
-Furniture Expressions leased 8,040 square feet of retail space in College Park Plaza-Ventures, 3443-8421 W 86th St. The landlord, Sandor Development, was represented by Drew Kelly of Sandor. The tenant represented itself.
-Leaders Moving leased 5,200 square feet of industrial space at 9900 Westpoint Drive. The tenant was represented by Dustin Looper of Colliers International. The landlord, Andrew Lowe, was represented by Fritz Kauffman and Bryan Poynter of Cassidy Turley.
-Finders Keepers leased 3,482 square feet of retail space in East 40 Plaza, 8506 E Washington St. The landlord, Sandor Development, was represented by Jeff Roberts of Sandor. The tenant represented itself.
-BSN Sports renewed its lease fo 3,200 square feet of industrial space at 7215 E. 21st St. The tenant was represented by Patrick Lindley of Cassidy Turley. The landlord, Justus Companies, represented itself.
-D&F Assoc. Ltd., doing business as Miracle Method of Indianapolis West, leased 2,400 square feet of industrial space at 2445 Directors Row. The tenant was represented by Bryan Poynter of Cassidy Turley. The landlord, American National Insurance Co., was represented by Donald Wahle of Harshman Property Services LLC.
-World Finance leased 1,481 square feet at Western Plaza, 195 Sheridan Road, Carmel. The tenant was represented by Seth Biggerstaff of Veritas Realty. The landlord, Thompson Thrift, was represented by Ryan Menard of Thompson Thrift.
-Allstate Insurance leased 1,400 square feet of retail space in Old Town Shoppes, 1264 W. 86th St. The landlord, Sandor Development, was represented by Drew Kelly of Sandor. The tenant represented itself.
-Wings & Seafood leased 1,237 square feet of retail space in Esquire Plaza, 8237 Pendleton Pike. The landlord, Sandor Development, was represented by Jeff Roberts of Sandor. The tenant represented itself.
-Big Red Liquors bought a 33,000-square-foot building on three acres at 5429 S. East St. The seller, United Leasing Inc., was represented by Michael P. Sloan of The Broadbent Group. The buyer represented itself.
-Herman-Hall LLC bought Lakewood Shoppes, a 12,000-square-foot retail center at 5900 E. 71st St. The seller, Lakewood Shops LLC, was represented by Kevin Broderick and Matt Gray of CBRE. The buyer represented itself.
-Onkar Singh bought a 1,300-square-foot restaurant at 4175 N. Post Road. The buyer was represented by Manjit Singh of Star Alliance Brokerage. The seller, Kyongchang Kum, was represented by Tracey Holtzman of Midland Atlantic Properties.
Fox Studios Inc., the venerable stained glass company whose work is on display at countless churches throughout the state and even the Indiana Statehouse, is closing.
In what might be the strangest twist in banking technology in years, Indianapolis-based Salin Bank is the first financial institution in the state to install sophisticated, interactive video tellers.
The world of philanthropy, where shoestring budgets dominate, is nonetheless proving lucrative for BidPal Inc., a 108-employee company led by tech veteran Scott Webber. The company saw revenue rocket from $1.8 million in 2010 to $10.2 million last year, making it the city’s second-fastest-growing private company, according to IBJ’s annual list.
A new foundation supporting the Indianapolis Department of Public Safety starts work in July, and its board is stacked with business and political leaders eager to help Director Troy Riggs advance the city’s cash-strapped operation.
In the past 18 months, Larry Durkos—who invented a machine that attaches metal bed box springs and coils to wood frames—has scored two stunning victories over Leggett & Platt Inc., a Missouri-based box-spring conglomerate.
“Hoosier History Live!” is believed to be the nation’s only live, call-in show about a state’s history. The 5-year-old show has only an estimated 1,000 listeners, but they tend to be those who are passionate about all things Hoosier heritage.
Vera Bradley Inc., 2208 Production Road, Fort Wayne, Ind., 46808, sells handbags, accessories, paper-and-gift items and travel items through 65 retail stores, 11 outlet stores, 3,400 specialty stores and through verabradley.com.
We have plenty to celebrate, most of which happens on the field of play. The bad stuff happens on the fringes.
The twisting, turning, maddening tale of our broken oven doesn’t quite measure up in the grand scheme of things.
Prosecutors said 53-year-old Karen Armacost forged hundreds of checks and took credit card payments between 2007 and 2012 from bank accounts maintained by Greenwood Orthopaedics.
The extremely silly musical, based on ‘Monty Python and the Holy Grail,’ gets an extremely satisfying local production.
I appreciated Mickey Maurer’s [June 10] commentary drawing attention to the fact that the overwhelming percentage of violent crimes is committed by repeat offenders.
Restricting not-for-profits from the Fishers Interstate 69 corridor [June 10] ignores an organization’s impact on a community’s quality of life and focusing only on the bottom line.
When I embarked on my 110-day, 48,000-swing, cross-country golf odyssey, I had prepared for the rigors of hitting 500-600 golf balls a day on deserted roads in 100-degree heat.
Two law stories made Indianapolis headlines last week. One is Tomisue Hilbert’s lawsuit against John Menard, claiming he tried to extort, uh, “favors,” and is now trying to wreak financial revenge for being rebuffed. Hmm. What say we talk about the other story?
What if we had a public school system the entire city could be proud of?