2018 Forty Under 40: Doug Ding
Doug Ding is determined to develop the next generation of Indy leaders while championing the region’s tech assets.
Doug Ding is determined to develop the next generation of Indy leaders while championing the region’s tech assets.
With a legal degree and a record of combat service in the Marines, Travis E. Barnes followed his bliss to launch Hotel Tango Whiskey, the first artisan distillery in Indianapolis since Prohibition.
The company has purchased the property on Pendleton Pike where a former Menards store stood and hopes to have the 1,000-unit facility ready by fall.
The hotel’s developer is trying to strike a deal with a Veterans of Foreign Wars post to share the same lot. So far, the latter is holding its ground.
The pay gains suggest that employers are increasingly competing for a limited pool of workers. Raises stemming from minimum wage increases in 18 states also likely boosted pay last month.
The 35-year-old annual outlook, held in recent years at Old National Centre, this year will be conducted online instead, in what the firm says is an attempt to reach more people.
The number of tourism and hospitality jobs in Indianapolis also grew—from 77,800 in 2015 to 80,600 in 2016, according to the report.
City officials are considering an ordinance to crack down on hotels and motels they say are a magnet for crime, pose a danger to area residents, and drain city police and fire resources.
Serial restaurateur Mike Cunningham’s stable of eateries has swelled to 24,and he’s taking over the closed Old Point Tavern on Massachusetts Avenue and Cerulean at The Alexander hotel in CityWay.
A hulking retail property pocked with vacancies sends a terrible message about Indianapolis’ vitality to the throngs of conventioneers who walk its corridors.
Real estate experts disagree over whether the prominent downtown space being vacated by Carson’s makes more sense for another retailer (perhaps Target?) or for an office user.
For folks who want something a little more structurally solid than glamping but more homey than a hotel, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway plans to offer lodging for this year’s Indy 500 in pint-sized houses.
A project of this size could actually change Indiana’s per-capita income. It could generate 30,000 spin-off jobs and produce hundreds of millions of dollars in state and local tax revenue.
One of the most prominent office buildings downtown has become available for lease and is expected to generate plenty of interest from prospective tenants coveting a prized Monument Circle address.
Anthem decided not to renew its lease on the former J.C. Penney department store, which was refurbished for the insurance giant in the 1990s.
From 1,000-mile drives to special cable packages, Hoosier kin pull out the stops to see every game.
An Ohio developer is planning a five-story lodging property near the U.S. 31 corridor with the budget-friendly Home2 Suites brand.
A proposed ordinance drafted by Fishers' parks department will go before its city council Tuesday night.
The 4.5-acre parcel just east of the Monon Trail received a high bid of $2.75 million. All of the proposals would mix commercial and housing development.
The Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indians is set to open the Four Winds Casino South Bend to the public on Tuesday, joining three other casinos the tribe already operates nearby in southwestern Michigan.