3 restaurant newcomers make splash in Hamilton County
There’s nothing like a “coming soon” sign in the window to build an appetite, so diners have flocked to a trio of Hamilton County newcomers that opened their doors this summer.
There’s nothing like a “coming soon” sign in the window to build an appetite, so diners have flocked to a trio of Hamilton County newcomers that opened their doors this summer.
Indiana-based Olthof Homes has filed plans to build 430 new homes in Westfield, including townhouses that would start at $150,000.
The hospital system said the facility would help meet the soaring demand for hip and knee replacements while also serving patients with the “most complex” orthopedic conditions.
Mike Corbett is owner of Hamilton County Media Group, which publishes the Hamilton County Business Magazine.
Restaurants and medical clinics are flocking to the sprawling Anson development in Whitestown. Plus, Carmel gets a Rosie’s and a British Swim School, while Noblesville snags a new doughnut shop.
Crowds gathered on the northeast corner of Noblesville’s courthouse square on Nov. 2, 1942, during activities to support World War II.
If approved by the city, site work would begin in early spring 2019, with construction starting shortly after.
Fishers plans to submit an application to the Indiana Arts Commission to recognize the Nickel Plate District as a statewide cultural district.
Indianapolis-based produce distributor IF&P Foods LLC has acquired Noblesville-based convenience food service company Cibus Fresh Inc., the companies announced Tuesday.
A Utah-based company that runs dozens of event centers across the United States is making plans to open its first Indiana venue, in Carmel.
Carmel officials say ongoing negotiations with Forrest Lucas regarding his Carmel estate have not been successful. Now, Carmel plans to enforce a zoning ruling that ultimately prohibited some special events.
The mixed-use development would provide downtown Noblesville with its first-ever parking garage and its first new apartment building in more than a century.
The cancer center, which is being built on the campus of IU Health North Hospital, will be named after Joseph Schwarz, who died in March of throat cancer, and his wife, Shelly.
Carmel wants to purchase the property at Main Street and Rangeline Road as part of a project to create a mixed-use development, but PNC Bank has resisted.
Two lawmakers sent letters to the Indianapolis City-County Council this week encouraging them to investigate whether the city owns any portion of the Nickel Plate Railroad line.
Two square miles of Hamilton County where residents for years resisted becoming part of Carmel, despite being surrounded by it, are soon to become much more Carmel-like.
The Mohawk Landing Shopping Center, built 36 years ago, will be redeveloped into a mixed-use property.
First Internet Bank agreed to acquire 11 parcels on the south side of 116th Street for $10 million, with Fishers agreeing to reimburse the bank for land acquisition costs.
CalAtlantic has filed to develop a 77-home project very similar to one first envisioned by Bruce Gunstra Builders Inc., which was once one of the area’s largest homebuilders.
Federal prosecutors arrested a 20-year-old man and an unnamed co-co-conspirator in connection to anti-Semitic graffiti that was spray-painted at a suburban Indianapolis synagogue last month.