Real Estate Weekly: News notes, 04/27/21
These news notes appeared in IBJ’s Real Estate Weekly on April 27, 2021.real estate
These news notes appeared in IBJ’s Real Estate Weekly on April 27, 2021.real estate
These news notes appeared in IBJ’s Real Estate Weekly on April 20, 2021.
The weather is starting to warm up, meaning patio dining is much more comfortable than it was a few months ago.
Town officials have grown “frustrated by a lack of transparency and communication from Loftus Robinson despite our multiple requests,” as well as the firm’s effort to continue batting away responsibility for the project.
These news notes appeared in Real Estate Weekly on Jan. 12, 2020:
Forty years ago, Hamilton County’s suburbs were viewed as little more than northern extensions of Indianapolis. Today, they are destinations all their own.
Also, in the latest North of 96th roundup, a barber shop and wellness lounge is planning its grand opening. Meanwhile, a Carmel theater has reopened and a Zionsville tea room is closing.
Loftus Robinson LLC partnered with an Indianapolis hotelier late last week to shore up financing for the project at the southeast corner of 16th and Main streets. Construction has been stalled since July 2019.
Tall ceilings, large windows and a great balcony attracted Bryan Bisson to a four-story condo on Alabama Street.
The city is taking on $25 million in sewer projects, including a series of new lines that will satisfy a long-term control plan required by the Indiana Department of Environmental Management.
The remediation expert specializes in brownfield investigation—looking at any previously developed land that is not in use but might have been contaminated.
In this photo taken July 2, 1983, Indianapolis Mayor William Hudnut speaks at the United Northwest Area annual picnic and explains how federal Urban Reinvestment Task Force programs would provide money to rehabilitate homes in the neighborhood, as
The combination barber shop and watering hole headlines a slew of openings in Fishers, Carmel and Whitestown. Also in the works: a new Fishers retail center.
Projects worth $23 million will upgrade four parks over the next two years, but other improvements might have to wait if local officials can’t identify new ways to pay for parks.
Strongbox, a commercial development and construction management company, plans to spend $7 million to tear down a quarter of the existing store and then add a second retail building to the site.
Founded in 1983, the practice has 28 physicians and annual revenue of $35 million, and shows little sign of slowing.
Plans are underway to build a national Desert Storm and Desert Shield Memorial near the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C.—and the effort has Hoosier fingerprints all over it.
Democratic Mayor Joe Hogsett says if he’s elected to serve a second term, he hopes “that prosperity can be shared by more people in Marion County than has been the case in the past.”
The Indianapolis Historic Preservation Commission voted Wednesday night to put a historic designation on the eight-story apartment building owned by The Children’s Museum of Indianapolis amid concerns the structure might be torn down in coming weeks.
The city’s historic preservation commission plans to move forward Wednesday with an effort that could curtail a plan by The Children’s Museum of Indianapolis to demolish an aging eight-story apartment building it has owned since 2012.