Gomez BBQ branching out from City Market
The homegrown venture will open its first stand-alone restaurant on East 10th Street. Also this week: Peloton, Culver’s, Lululemon and more.
The homegrown venture will open its first stand-alone restaurant on East 10th Street. Also this week: Peloton, Culver’s, Lululemon and more.
A Washington, D.C.-based not-for-profit group has launched a co-op for residents and businesses in Hamilton County who want to install solar panels at a group rate.
The company hired Patti Kolodziejczyk as vice president of application delivery and promoted Doug Williams to vice president of finance and administration for the company’s Bankers Life brand.
Business has been slow to build at Beholder, which isn’t yet consistently profitable and has had to cut staffing to the bone.
Blue Indy has yet to see a money-making year, and the company’s top Indianapolis official says he can’t predict when that will happen.
The next generation of wireless internet will provide super-fast service, longer battery lives and a wealth of capabilities. But it comes at what some view as an aesthetic cost.
Indianapolis-based Sun King acquired the business assets of the former Thr3e Wise Men location on Broad Ripple Avenue in an auction Thursday.
Green District is a quick-service restaurant that offers build-your-own and specialty salads. A second Indianapolis-area location is already in the works for Carmel.
Indianapolis-based Ratio Architects Inc., the city’s largest architectural firm, announced Tuesday that it was merging with Denver-based Humphries Poli Architects.
The Cook family is holding its cards close to its vest, saying only that it’s “excited to expand operations of (its) businesses to the downtown Indianapolis territory.”
Asbury Automotive Group, the nation’s seventh-largest auto retailer, now has made four acquisitions in the Indianapolis area totaling more than a quarter-billion dollars since 2017. Butler is being rebranded as part of the purchase.
The company has been bleeding red ink, but its Medicare business is booming and could ring up nearly $100 million in profit this year—if the company can hire enough people to help all the seniors calling in with questions.
The company, eHealth Inc., is led by Scott Flanders, an Indianapolis native and former CEO of Macmillan Publishing in Carmel and Playboy Enterprises in Chicago.
In the last 18 months, more than a half-dozen tech companies have opened up shop in the village or decided to do so.
The owners of the 18-acre former Angie’s List campus just east of downtown are relying on a promise of lower rent, connectivity with downtown, and the potential for future nearby development to draw tenants.
Many of the providers are not traditional health systems, but rather small, for-profit startups attracted by a soaring demand for recovery services.
The company, which provides outsourced IT services, has been able to grow explosively despite spending little on marketing.
The real estate firm has found success with a formula of buying apartment communities, then improving them and adding management efficiencies.
Shepherd has seen revenue double over the last three years and ranks among the 50 biggest insurance agencies in the United States.
The construction firm has gotten a boost from clients in such industries as health care and corrections.