Priority list includes open-air Wes Anderson, an artful bike ride, more
It’s officially summer, which means outdoor activities, a musical from Bob Harbin, and lots of concert choices.
It’s officially summer, which means outdoor activities, a musical from Bob Harbin, and lots of concert choices.
The Indiana Department of Environmental Management is taking public comments through June 30 on its draft plan for adopting the new rules.
Teams of IndyGo volunteers, called “transit ambassadors,” are on foot at bus stops around the city, spreading the word about big changes that will affect all 31 of the system’s routes.
A seat on the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission has been open more than two months, despite a requirement that three candidate names be submitted to the governor within 40 days of the vacancy.
One of Indianapolis’ most unique historic structures, a naval armory vacant since early last year, soon will be bustling again—this time with high school students.
The three children of the late Celadon Group cofounder Steve Russell filed a will contest Wednesday alleging his second wife boosted her inheritance from his $31 million estate by taking advantage of his dementia.
The children of deceased Celadon Group Inc. founder Stephen Russell allege that his second wife engineered changes to his will while he suffered from dementia and Parkinson's disease, boosting the amount she was set to immediately inherit from his estimated $31.5 million estate and potentially reducing the amount they would receive through a trust. Jonathan […]
The plan calls for a more than 66,000-square-foot addition to the football stadium.
Premiums for popular low-cost medical plans under the federal health care law are expected to go up an average of 11 percent next year, says a new study. But not in Indianapolis.
During Tuesday’s hearing, a federal judge questioned whether the law would infringe on some women’s right to an abortion.
Shares in WP Glimcher Inc. fell nearly 7 percent Monday after the Columbus-based retail landlord refuted reports it was involved in merger negotiations with Indianapolis-based Kite Realty Group Trust.
Plus the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra opens its Conner Prairie season.
Primerica Inc.’s annual gathering will be one of the city’s five biggest conventions in 2017. The deal came together in a matter of weeks, which is exceedingly rare in the world of mega-conventions.
A deluge of apartment projects is on track to bring 500 units to Broad Ripple—a building boom that promises to bolster the daytime traffic village leaders have long coveted.
Only 1 percent of the events booked over the last year at the Indiana Convention Center asked for gender-neutral bathrooms, but hospitality experts say it’s a big and growing issue.
When I listen to youth at the Marion County Juvenile Detention Center share their dreams, they rarely say they want to work for someone. Usually a good percentage of the young people want to be entrepreneurs.
The EEOC has decided that wellness programs must be voluntary and the associated incentives or discounts can’t exceed more than 30 percent of the cost of the employees’ health coverage.
The city plans to end a moratorium on new streetlights by installing 100 lights in areas with high accident and crime rates, and in growing neighborhoods, Mayor Joe Hogsett announced Thursday.
It will cost $900,000 to open Delaware Street for tunnel construction and to repave the road, and another $1.4 million to build the underground portion of the walkway, according to a state filing.
The challenge, according to an author of a study of pedestrian-friendly cities, is picking up ground on the dozens of major metro areas that also are making walkability a higher priority.