Trucking giant pegs Whitestown for parts distribution center, 45 hires
A company that sold more than 160,000 trucks last year intends to spend $12.35 million to lease and equip a 283,500-square-foot facility for sending parts across the Midwest.
A company that sold more than 160,000 trucks last year intends to spend $12.35 million to lease and equip a 283,500-square-foot facility for sending parts across the Midwest.
The project, which received final approval from the Noblesville City Council earlier this week despite receiving a negative recommendation from the Noblesville Plan Commission, will include 270 multifamily units and 140 single-family homes.
The company will locate in the Lebanon Business Park and pay salaries “well above $20 per hour,” an economic development official said.
Jennifer Miller, former assistant director of economic and community development for Westfield, will join the not-for-profit Sept. 12, the board of directors for HAND announced Monday.
Ken Alexander, who was director of Westfield’s Grand Park Sports Campus for less than two years, confirmed Monday that he resigned from the position.
Westfield officials on Thursday confirmed Ken Alexander’s departure but provided no details. He was the first to hold the position of director, overseeing operations at the nearly 400-acre sports campus.
People’s Brewing Co. plans to occupy the 6,000-square-foot space at 111 Main St. that formerly housed upscale French restaurant Bijou.
Moontown Brewing Company plans to spend between $700,000 and $1.2 million to renovate the 10,000-square-foot vacant Whitestown High School to open a brewpub.
Traders Point Christian Church has acquired a 104-year-old building at the corner of 12th and Delaware streets and plans to spend $2 million to renovate it.
Results from a special U.S. Census Bureau population count shows big growth in the Hamilton County suburb.
A subsidiary of Kite Realty Group Trust had submitted the request as part of a plan to redesign part of the shopping center at a busy corner on 146th Street.
Noblesville residents and business owners Michael and Tawni Partin have purchased the two-story buildings on Logan Street with the intention of remodeling and merging the structures.
TelaCare Health Solutions LLC moved into an office suite in Launch Fishers about a month ago, but CEO Larry Jones said his company is only using it as temporary space as he searches for a larger, permanent office.
The five-year agreement gives First Merchants Bank the naming rights to the stage and amphitheater under construction in Federal Hill Park, while the city acquires a parcel from the bank.
The project stretching from 146th Street to 166th Street on Towne Road would include single-family houses and amenities like tennis courts and swimming pools.
Dublin, Ohio-based CLB Restaurants decided to close its only Langton’s location after sales failed to meet expectations. CLB plans to expand its neighboring Matt the Miller’s concept into the vacant space.
A developer’s request for looser restrictions on fast-food restaurants in the Harmony development in Westfield could be withdrawn—in exchange for the city’s pledge to allow a gas station in the community.
The 800-acre upscale Chatham Hills golf community in Westfield has about 65 homes under construction now, and that could exceed 100 before the end of the year, according to developer Steve Henke.
Indianapolis-area communities stayed out of the home-sharing-platform debates—until Zionsville ordered a couple to stop offering an apartment above their garage to out-of-town guests.
Stomping Barley is expected to open near the corner of 146th Street and River Road before the end of the year.