NFP of NOTE: IndyCar Ministry
The IndyCar Ministry is a nondenominational Christian organization, which was developed to pastor the racing community.
The IndyCar Ministry is a nondenominational Christian organization, which was developed to pastor the racing community.
-National Expo Inc. leased 39,950 square feet at 2363 E. Perry Road in the Airwest Business Park. The tenant was represented by Ryan Kelly of Summit Realty Group. The landlord, ProLogis, was represented by Luke Wessel of Cassidy Turley.
-James Allen Insurance leased 8,216 square feet at 11611 N. Meridian St., Carmel. The landlord, Zeller Realty Group, was represented by Tristan Glover of Zeller. The tenant represented itself.
-Clinical Architecture leased 5,405 square feet at 11611 N. Meridian St., Carmel. The tenant was represented by Ralph Balber of Newmark Knight Frank Halakar. The landlord, Zeller Realty Group, was represented by Tristan Glover of Zeller.
-Community Spirits leased 4,800 square feet of retail space in Sherman Commons, 3709 E. Washington St. The tenant and landlord, Indy Management Group Inc., were represented by Cindy Hoskinson and Herb Feldmann of Lee & Associates.
-Kuaba Art Gallery leased the entire second floor, or 3,500 square feet, at the King Cole Building, 1 N. Meridian St. The tenant was represented by Gary Perel of Newmark Knight Frank Halakar. The landlord, King Cole Investors, represented itself.
-RadioShack Corp. leased 3,110 square feet of office space at 8730 Commerce Park Place. The landlord, Dhillon Commerce Park LLC, was represented by Darrin Boyd and Dave Moore of Cassidy Turley. The tenant represented itself.
-Pearly White Smiles Family and Cosmetic Dentistry leased 3,083 square feet at Park Meridian at 96th and Meridian streets. The tenant was represented by Gary Perel of Newmark Knight Frank Halakar. The landlord, Landmark Properties Inc. represented itself.
-Commonwealth Brands leased 2,997 square feet at 8910 Purdue Road. The tenant was represented by Tom Hadley of Summit Realty Group. The landlord, Zeller Realty Group, was represented by Mark Vollbrecht of Zeller.
-Transformations at Pilates Studio LLC leased 2,228 square feet of retail space at 3958 E. 82nd St. The tenant was represented by Brad King of Colliers International. The landlord, Clearwater Crossing LP, was represented by John Beuoy of Broadbent Co. Inc.
-Zogurts LLC leased 1,600 square feet of retail space in Fall Creek Harbour, 10134 Brooks School Road, Fishers. The tenant was represented by Jeff Merritt of Summit Realty Group. The landlord, FCH Associates LLC, was represented by Cindy Hoskinson and Herb Feldmann of Lee & Associates.
-Gordon N. Stowe & Associates Inc. leased 1,553 square feet of office space at 8770 Commerce Park Place. The landlord, Dhillon Commerce Park LLC, was represented by Darrin Boyd and Dave Moore of Cassidy Turley. The tenant represented itself.
Every business sector has influential players, whether they are in the public eye or wield their influence behind the scenes. IBJ is identifying those people in eight different industry categories. Up this month: commercial real estate.
May 2
Clowes Hall
Yes, it’s a charity event raising significant funds for the Indiana AIDS Fund. But Spotlight is also an annual opportunity to feel really, really good about the quality, quantity and spirit of the Indianapolis arts talent pool.
This time, such anchoring acts as the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra (scheduled to offer Sibelius’ “Andante Festivo”), drag-ster Asia La Bouche (strutting it to Katy Perry’s “Firework”) and tenor Steven Stolen, are joined by Actors Theatre of Indiana (with “Cell Block Tango” from the aforementioned “Chicago”), the Phoenix Theatre (ditto from “The Zippers of Zoomerville”), Indianapolis Opera, Gregory Hancock Dance Theatre, Indianapolis Children’s Choir, Brenda Williams, Dance Kaleidoscope with Cathy Morris (in a sneak peek at their upcoming collaboration), poet Tasha Jones, the Indianapolis Men’s Chorus, the return of Milicent Wright (representing the IRT in an excerpt from “Neat”) and a lot more. Details here.
April 28-May 28
Phoenix Theatre
When the Phoenix Theatre offered the world premiere of this musical back in 2009, here’s what I wrote:
“Inspired by Gilbert & Sullivan, "Zoomerville" is imprinted with influences from Steven Sondheim to Andy Prieboy (whose club musical, "White Trash Wins Lotto," is the closest thing I've seen to it in style and spirit). But I don't want to give too much credit to its antecedents at the expense of praise for the relentless creativity of playwright/co-lyricist Jack O'Hara, aided and abetted by composer Tim Brickley. The densely (and hilariously) packed lyrics and jaunty score are both stronger than any reasonable theatergoer would expect. And Phebe Taylor and Scot Greenwell stand out in the plum parts of pageant queen Happenstance Throttlehopper and rookie racer John Hoosier Lordyboy Jr. ‘Zoomerville’ offers two hours of joyful silliness—OK, maybe an hour and a half, with some easily trimmable filler—that, I believe, could break out of this market and reach a wider audience. Do I smell a future ‘Urinetown’?”
Well, Taylor and Greenwell are back. The show has been trimmed. And the engines start this week. I’ll race you there. Details here.
The blues resonate with the tough people living tough lives.
Thoughts on Savion Glover at the Palladium, ‘This’ at the Phoenix, and ‘Annie Get Your Gun’ at Beef & Boards.
Ryan leaped into the vacuum left by the president’s passivity.
We need the remaining month of this Legislature to look a lot less like the last month.
The best part of this Butler University run to another Final Four isn’t that the Bulldogs put themselves in position for a second straight year to win a national championship. It’s that they already have won one. Well, kinda, sorta.
A legislative stalemate in Indiana reached a political milestone on Tuesday as House Democrats stayed away from their jobs for a 30th consecutive day in what now ranks among the longest Statehouse boycotts in recent U.S. history.
Indiana wants to use its public health savings account program for low-income adults to cover people who will become newly eligible for Medicaid under the federal health care law beginning in 2014.
Announcements United Way of Central Indiana added its name to the list of those supporting the Indiana Compact, a statement of principles for immigration policy reform. The Indiana Compact advocates five principles should guide policy solutions around immigration reform: • federal solutions – urge Indiana’s Congressional delegation to address this federal policy issue. • law enforcement – respect the […]
Indiana University Health is the latest system to drill employees ranging from clerks to physicians in how to treat patients.
Is theater dead? Three different productions from three different companies over the past few weeks point to some ways to counter—or at least hold off—the decline.
The shock of dark hair is gone, but Jerry Brown is still Jerry Brown. The prickliness, bluntness, questioning, calculating. That against-the-grain attitude; disdain for materialism, emptiness and politics as usual; that Jesuit-Buddhist outlook.