Former Bluebeard chef Adams to start Fountain Square eatery
Also a tastemaker at Plow & Anchor, John Adams now is teaming with retail broker Brian Epstein to open Marrow in Fountain Square, where Maria’s Pizza was located.
Also a tastemaker at Plow & Anchor, John Adams now is teaming with retail broker Brian Epstein to open Marrow in Fountain Square, where Maria’s Pizza was located.
Ironworks at Keystone will boast a new-to-Indy burger joint this month, as a tea shop pours into the nearby Fashion Mall. In Fletcher Place, the new restaurant Repeal harkens back to 1933.
This 1992 profile of then-CEO L. Ben Lytle chronicles the evolution of the company—then known as The Associated Group—from a sleepy health insurer operating in only one state into an acquisitive, aggressive business with national ambitions.
Deylen Realty is requesting the abatement to offset the cost of building Forte, a 64-unit apartment-and-retail project on part of a surface lot that had been owned by the city.
The fates of several religious structures in older parts of Indianapolis, often considered architectural gems, are uncertain because dwindling congregations lack the wherewithal to keep up with escalating costs.
The local apartment developer has brought aboard Jason Sturman from Duke Realty Corp. to serve as chief investment officer and help guide its Midwest expansion.
BlueIndy plans to charge past its skeptics as its electric car-sharing program launches in Indianapolis Sept. 2, leaving behind the political consternation about whether Mayor Greg Ballard went rogue in green-lighting the program in the first place.
Ash & Elm Cider Co. plans to open early next year in space along East Washington Street on the near-east side, while Big Lug Canteen should start serving beers next month from the old Snooty Fox building in Nora.
Indianapolis Business Journal gathered leaders in the state’s commercial real estate and construction industry for a Power Breakfast panel discussion Sept. 10.
Husband-and-wife Bill and Teresa Webster made a big bet on Fletcher Place this year, opening 12.05 Distillery and the Repeal restaurant in the up-and-coming neighborhood.
The seven parcels on Prospect Street, which are available for a total of $1.5 million, could attract the area's next big apartment development.
The Tappers retro arcade bar should open in the Slate mixed-use development on Virginia Avenue by the end of the year, while Vintage Vogue by Goodwill is set to move into space, also on Virginia in Fountain Square.
The developer plans to begin tearing down the 17,200-square-foot Center for Instructional Radio and Television at 931 Fletcher Ave. yet this year and start delivering for occupancy the first of 82 total units in about 12 months.
Low turnout for the mayor’s race and redrawn district maps could make a big difference in the most competitive council races in Districts 2, 3, 6, 16, 19 and 21.
Marrow opens Tuesday evening while Frona Mae began serving customers Monday from its East Washington Street space. Also, Hoaglin to Go plans second downtown location, in new YMCA.
Society of Salvage, a 2-year-old shop on downtown’s east side owned by Sandra Jarvis, has carved out an unusual niche in the salvage industry by unearthing industrial equipment and medical oddities from old buildings and factories.
Milhaus, parent of several real estate-related companies, is best-known for its local apartment projects, including Artistry, Circa, Maxwell, Mozzo and Penn Circle.
The city became center for food and huge gatherings.
Location advantages grounded the state as leader in making things.
A local company bought the historic building at 351 S. East St., near the entrance of the Fletcher Place neighborhood, and plans to convert it into office space.