Blue Pillar moves HQ, leads Indiana tech fundraising
Blue Pillar Inc., which sells energy management software, has raised almost $14 million this year, putting it atop Indiana tech companies in 2014.
Blue Pillar Inc., which sells energy management software, has raised almost $14 million this year, putting it atop Indiana tech companies in 2014.
Police stations across the country have started offering space for these business exchanges, saying it’s a win-win-win—strangers meet in a safe spot, police help prevent crime, and the danger of doing business on Craigslist decreases.
Carmel City Council approved a resolution pledging $40,000 annually for the Hamilton County Public Safety Training Facility earlier this week, meaning the facility has cleared one of its last hurdles.
The South Carolina-based coding academy has schools in 10 cities. Indianapolis will be its first Midwest location when classes start downtown in May.
Bren Simon claims she is owed a tax refund related to $83 million in contributions her late husband made to the Indiana Pacers to save the team from ruin after the infamous 2004 brawl against the Detroit Pistons.
The four-story, 80,000-square-foot addition will serve as the Carmel-based firm’s public entrance and showroom, as well provide office space for future growth.
Blue Pillar, which just landed nearly $14 million in equity funding, agreed to move its headquarters from Indianapolis to Maryland after getting $500,000 from a state-sponsored venture capital fund.
Hc1.com has raised $14.4 million more from angel investors to help it pursue an audacious goal: It wants to become the Salesforce.com of the health care industry. Zionsville-based Hc1 is using the money to expand from its roots—making software to help medical labs, pharmacies, physicians and hospital systems track the business relationships they have with […]
With the new infusion, the maker of energy-management software has brought in about $25 million in venture capital.
The Eagle, a Cincinnati-based restaurant operated by the Bakersfield ownership group, will occupy space Stout’s Shoes is vacating as part of a store downsizing.
Recently released site plans for the apartment component at the former Sunrise Golf Course show it’s slated to be high end and geared toward empty nesters.
Hyde Park Venture Partners plans to establish an Indianapolis office this spring on Monument Circle to be led by former ExactTarget executive Tim Kopp.
Leaders from some of Indiana's poorest school districts said Tuesday they fear proposed funding cuts they're facing, while those from growing districts are worried proposed increases for them won't be enough.
Plus Indy Film Festival’s Film to Fork series continues with “The Search for General Tso.”
A new subdivision with 315 homes could displace a golf course in Westfield, but so far city officials and residents aren’t sold on the plan.
The First Financial Bank branch at the northeast corner of Pennsylvania and Washington streets will close in May, while a restaurant from an Irvington couple opens on East 16th Street.
Dr. Jeff Sperring, the CEO of Riley Hospital for Children in Indianapolis, will leave this spring to become CEO of Seattle Children’s Hospital in early May, the Seattle hospital announced Thursday.
After cutting staff sharply in 2013, Franciscan enjoyed more revenue and big profits in 2014. The key question for its and other hospitals’ future is whether they can keep up these gains in productivity to handle looming payment cuts from Obamacare.
Beer and pizza—a classic combination and a pairing that might help revive the retail portion of the Village of West Clay in Carmel.
Jim Hallett is confident that his recently launched Indy Fuel hockey team will prosper, a bet he backed up by signing a 25-year lease at the Fairgrounds Coliseum.