Meet the five Democrats running for Indy’s new state Senate seat
The candidates are in a crowded primary election battle to become their party’s nominee for the seat.
The candidates are in a crowded primary election battle to become their party’s nominee for the seat.
Before he goes on tour as a member of hip-hop group 81355, Oreo Jones talks about his contribution to an Indiana State Museum exhibition.
Plus, see IBJ arts reporter Dave Lindquist’s picks for can’t-miss shows at a variety of area venues.
The bar opened on the first floor of the Forte apartment building, 1140 Shelby St., in September 2019.
Andrea Hunley, 38, is hoping to beat out four opponents in the Democratic primary to win a chance to represent a newly-created Indianapolis district covering the attendance area of her current and former schools.
The museum’s latest exhibit spans 1960 to 1972, when car designs changed radically, international drivers made a big impression, and the race arrived on television sets across the United States.
Indiana’s first Election Day after pandemic-related complications comes Tuesday, and a few hotly contested primary races are in the spotlight.
Hunley, a school principal, won the five-way primary in a new state Senate seat in Indianapolis, beating the Marion County Democratic Party’s slated candidate.
Marion County Democratic Party Chair Kate Sweeney Bell was headed toward victory Tuesday night in the primary race for county clerk, leading her non-slated primary opponent, former state Sen. Billie Breaux. Bell has said she would step down as party chair if she won.
A five-way battle for the Democratic nomination for a new state Senate seat in Indianapolis drew some voters to the polls.
Avenue Development plans to construct a four-story office structure in the middle of the 6500 block of Cornell Avenue, directly west of the Monon Trail. The building would include a first-floor restaurant from a well-known local operator.
Statistics show the IBJ readers are intensely interested in real estate, so the newsroom has reporters who spend considerable time covering the residential market, retail projects and commercial development.
During the past 20 years, several local festivals have come and gone. But WonderRoad planners say it has a reasonable shot at selling its first-year goal of 15,000 tickets.
Integra Builders has held the one-acre lot at the southwest corner of North Park Avenue and East North Street since January 2020, when previous owner Litz & Eaton Investments LLC sold the site as part of a messy split between the firm’s principals.
Eight new episodes of “Music in Transit” will promote the under-construction Purple Line as well as Indiana musicians.
The Wabash Heartland Innovation Network in West Lafayette is teaming up with New Hampshire-based Senet to establish a low-power, long-range network that’s ideal for internet-connected devices.
The Noblesville City Council heard proposals this week for two separate residential real estate developments that would create nearly 130 new residences in the city, including more 75 high-end homes near a golf course and 50 affordable-housing options.
Jules Muck, known for her “Muck Rock” tag, painted at the Indy Walls art center in Sacred Heart and at Fling Bungee Fitness in Noblesville.
Onyx+East was founded seven years ago with an initial focus on building housing in the urban core of Indianapolis. Now, CEO and principal Kelli Lawrence said, the company builds high-density housing all across the metro area, as well as in Cincinnati, Columbus, Ohio, and central Florida around Tampa.
Moller Enterprises, which owns The Sanctuary on Penn, bought the business operations from Linton Calvert, with plans to greatly increase event activity in the building.