Allen Plaza developer bullish on downtown, eager for next project
J. Greg Allen sees the $14 million Allen Plaza renovation as a message to city leaders that he intends to leave
a lasting mark on downtown.
J. Greg Allen sees the $14 million Allen Plaza renovation as a message to city leaders that he intends to leave
a lasting mark on downtown.
Kite Realty Group Trust reported a 70 percent drop in funds from operations for the quarter ended Sept. 30, after the Indianapolis-based
developer wrote off the entire book value of a Dallas strip center.
The Indiana Department of Labor has completed its investigation into the death of a construction worker at the expansion site
of the Indiana Convention Center and fined four local companies a total of $31,000 for safety violations.
The Flaherty & Collins project—dubbed 210 Trade—would have been the tallest residential building in the Carolinas, with more floors
than any building in the region except the Charlotte headquarters of Bank of America Corp.
The damage done by the recession is still with us, even if the recession itself has ended. But sufficient evidence is available to suggest that the demon recession has left the nation’s economic body.
Telic Corp., a developer and manufacturer of United States military equipment, announced Thursday it will invest more than
$1.2 million in the former Newport Chemical Depot in western Indiana, creating up to 500 jobs.
Citizens has donated 28 acres of land from its former Citizens Gas & Coke Utility site on the southeast side of Indianapolis
to Play Ball Indiana for the development of a youth sports complex.
The next time you’re tooling along Interstate 465 on the west side, take notice of the girders supporting the new 21st Street bridge. You might see more of them in the future. The experimental concrete beams are bigger than normal and shaped like a “U” instead of the traditional “I.” Think of an elongated, Paul-Bunyan-class […]
When Sisters of St. Francis Health Services Inc. bought Tonn and Blank Construction Co. in 1998, more
than one employee of the Michigan City firm wondered what it would be like to be run by a Roman Catholic
order that not only owned a string of Midwestern hospitals but also traced its spiritual heritage to
a 12th century mystic.
Some contractors, many of whom are desperate to replenish backlogs decimated by the recession, are not telling prospective
clients the whole story about exit strategies.
Counties wanting to speed traffic among suburbs are building highways to avoid having to travel into Indianapolis. The result,
a 100-mile outer loop beyond Interstate 465, won’t be completed for years, and it won’t be built to consistent standards,
but it might help ease congestion.
Indiana University economists offered a cautious but improving economic outlook for 2010, in which they expect the personal
income of Hoosiers to grow slightly and the state to add 50,000 jobs.
After winning 83-percent support for $754 million hospital, Wishard officials hope to sell bonds, pick construction firm
by year’s end.
Eli Lilly and Co.’s Byetta won a new market approval, which the company hopes will reverse the diabetes
drug’s recent sales decline. But the drug also was the subject of a new alert about kidney problems in patients taking
the drug. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration OK’d Byetta to be used sooner in patients suffering from poor blood
sugar control. But the FDA also told doctors to be alert about kidney problems of some patients taking Byetta.
Before, the FDA called for Byetta to be used only after patients tried other drugs without success. Byetta, which Lilly sells
via a partnership with San Diego-based Amylin Pharmaceuticals Inc., suffered a 5-percent decline in U.S. sales in the 12 months
year, to $171 million in the third quarter. Worldwide Byetta sales totaled $593 million through
the first nine months of this year, a 5-percent increase compared with the same period in 2008.
Lilly
also will trim 191 sales jobs in Indiana as part of a company-wide restructuring announced in September that ultimately
will result in 5,500 job cuts by the end of 2011. The pharmaceutical giant will trim its osteoporosis, diabetes and neuroscience
sales forces, which are listed as working out of the Lilly Technology Center on South Harding Street. The workers’ last day
will be Dec. 31.
Local health care information technology professionals will discuss efforts to bring Indiana health
care into the digital age at a breakfast meeting on Friday. The panelists will include Jane Niederberger, president of Indianapolis-based
My Health Care Manager LLC, Stacy Cook, a physician attorney at
the Indianapolis law firm of Barnes & Thornburg LLP, Michael E. Rudicle, a director at
the local office of New York-based accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, and Jack Horner, CEO of Major
Hospital in Shelbyville. The meeting, part of the New Economy New Rules series, will be held at the downtown offices
of the Barnes & Thornburg law firm.
Wishard Foundation said it has received a $6 million
grant from the Indianapolis-based Richard M. Fairbanks Foundation
to help fund construction of a new Wishard Hospital. Voters on Tuesday approved a new $754 million hospital
for Wishard Health Services. The $6 million grant is the single largest philanthropic contribution Wishard
has received in its 150-year history.
The FDA said a new titanium implant
to re-stabilize the spine, made by Zimmer Holdings Inc., showed good
results in a clinical trial. But the FDA also noted that physicians who had received consulting payments from Warsaw-based
Zimmer turned in patient results better than physicians who were not paid by Zimmer, according to the Associated Press. The
FDA noted the correlation was not statistically significant, but it will asks a panel of orthopedic specialists to weigh in
on the new device and decide whether Zimmer should provide more data before approving it for sale. The agency is not required
to follow the group’s advice, though it usually does.
Unofficial results from Tuesday night’s special election show more than eight out of 10 Marion County voters supporting a new $754 million hospital for Wishard Health Services.
The Wishard Foundation said it has received a $6 million grant from the Richard M. Fairbanks Foundation that will be used to help fund construction of a new Wishard Hospital, if Marion County voters approve the project.
-Equicor Real Estate Development and Investment hired Jones Lange LaSalle as leasing agent for Waterplace Park, a 113,000-square-foot, four-building complex at 8925 N. Meridian St., and for the 74,000-square-foot Fidelity Keystone Office Tower and Fidelity Keystone Office Park. John Robinson and Adam Broderick of Jones Lange LaSalle are brokers for the properties.
-Software Engineering Professionals leased 28,000 square feet in the James Building, which is under construction in Carmel City Center. The tenant was represented by Jenna Barnett of Halakar Real Estate. The owner of the building, REI Real Estate, was represented by John Robinson and Adam Broderick of Jones Lange LaSalle.
-Schiele Enterprises Inc. leased 21,000 square feet of industrial space at 2402 Shadeland Ave. The tenant was represented by Kevin B. Kempf of Colliers Turley Martin Tucker. The landlord, Shadeland Business Park LLC, represented itself.
-CornerStone Flooring leased 12,800 square feet of industrial space at 8068 Woodland Drive in Park 100. The tenant was represented by Kevin B. Kempf of Colliers Turley Martin Tucker. The landlord, Duke Realty, represented itself.
-Decatur Vein Clinic leased 2,250 square feet at 33 E. County Line Road, Greenwood. The tenant was represented by David Black of Grubb & Ellis Harding Dahm & Co. The landlord, County Line Commons LLC, was represented by Rebecca Baer of Summit Realty Group.
-Dr. Matthew Wittrig, DDS, leased 2,363 square feet at 33 E. County Line Road, Greenwood. The tenant was represented by Jim Marron of UGL Equis. The landlord, County Line Commons LLC, was represented by Rebecca Baer of Summit Realty Group.
-Triumvirate Enterprises leased 2,460 square feet at 5777 Park Plaza Court in Park Plaza Business Park. The tenant was represented by Kurt Meyer of Baseline Commercial. The owner, First Industrial Realty Trust, was represented by Mary Sullivan of First Industrial and Nikhil Gunale of CB Richard Ellis.
-Peter Municipal Consultants PC leased 1,250 square feet at South Greenwood Shoppes, 6001 N. U.S. 31, Whiteland. Cathy Richards of Grubb & Ellis Harding Dahm & Co. represented the landlord, HRCP Inc. John Vance of Keller Williams represented the tenant.
-Sweeties GT leased 2,523 square feet at Broad Ripple Station, 1081 Broad Ripple Ave. Ron Mannon of Grubb & Ellis Harding Dahm & Co. represented the tenant. The landlord, LOR Corp., was represented by Suzanne Gammon of LOR.
-LJ Stone Co. leased 806 square feet at Lake Plaza 6801 Lake Plaza Drive. Debbie Shumate of Grubb & Ellis Harding Dahm & Co. represented the landlord, Lake Plaza LLC and LeBarron Investments. The tenant was represented by Brian Dell of Summit Realty Group.
Four properties for sale along a two-block stretch of East Market Street downtown are likely to offer the first signs of what’s
in store for an area real estate brokers think will get a boost from the recent removal of the Market Street interstate ramp.
Tuesday’s vote will determine if Marion County Health & Hospital Corp. can sell up to $703 million in taxpayer-backed bonds
to replace the county-owned hospital.