New Le Peep operator zeroes in on sixth area eatery
Le Peep Restaurants of Indiana was acquired in January by a local investment group intent on making some improvements to the Indianapolis-area restaurants.
Le Peep Restaurants of Indiana was acquired in January by a local investment group intent on making some improvements to the Indianapolis-area restaurants.
One of Circle Centre’s original tenants is preparing to close, more than 22 years after entering the Indianapolis market with the downtown store.
The Indianapolis-based mall owner had sued Starbucks, attempting to stop the coffee giant from closing dozens of Teavana locations at its properties.
Three new restaurants are opening on the Mile Square’s south side, including a couple of nontraditional locations piggybacking on established facilities and a Mexican eatery taking the former site of El Rodeo.
The new owners of the local company—which was launched in 1988 by Bill Eckrich as part of the national Le Peep chain—plan to renovate all the restaurants.
Philadelphia-based Rubenstein Partners and Strategic Capital Partners of Indianapolis have acquired the Precedent Office Park, the second large local business park purchased by the partnership in the past 18 months.
A lower court judge temporarily blocked Starbucks from closing its Teavana stores because of its lease obligations.
Martha Hoover’s latest creation, a Southern-style fried-chicken joint, begins serving Thursday, while the new eatery from local tastemaker Neal Brown prepares for a January debut.
A Marion Superior Court judge has granted the Indianapolis-based mall giant’s request for a temporary injunction, at least for now preventing Starbucks from closing 77 Teavana stores in its properties nationwide.
There were the state football championships, two marquee Pacers games, the Old Oaken Bucket showdown and a Colts home matchup that looked winnable.
The high-end, sports-centric bar and eatery shut its doors on Sunday, but its downtown location at Circle Centre mall remains open.
The club, which opened in 1982, no longer is hosting comedy acts, although the downtown location remains open.
West Fork Whiskey looks to complement Cannonball Brewing on Bellefontaine, and the New Zealand burger joint nails down its second Indy locale. Plus, pancakes in Irvington.
Coach Inc., the iconic New York-based leather goods maker that has several stores in Indiana, is changing its corporate name after 76 years in business.
The Metropolitan Development Commission rejected a request from local developer Keystone Realty Group to rezone the site near Keystone at the Crossing to make way for a 60,000-square-foot office and retail building.
Condado Tacos commits to Broad Ripple, with plans for a downtown location, while Burger Study opens Monday amid fierce competition in the upscale burger segment.
The company said Wednesday that it wants to shift focus to its growing brands Old Navy and Athleta while jettisoning hundreds of stores under the Gap and Banana Republic flags.
Simon Property Group Inc., the nation’s largest mall owner, is getting a big assist from an unlikely source in its bid to backfill wide swaths of space left by failed or struggling clothing chains.
Sugarfire Smoke House won’t begin serving customers in early fall, as it had previously announced. Meanwhile, there’s turnover at another prime retail spot on Washington Street.
Indianapolis-based Simon Property Group, the country’s largest shopping mall operator, says in the lawsuit that Starbucks is breaching its leases by closing the Teavana stores and “shirking its contractual obligations.”