Joe’s Butcher Shop expanding to offer catering, lunch options
Joe Lazzara, owner of Joe’s Butcher Shop and Fish Market, is adding 900 square feet to his store on Main Street in Carmel.
Joe Lazzara, owner of Joe’s Butcher Shop and Fish Market, is adding 900 square feet to his store on Main Street in Carmel.
Four of the family’s five local businesses operate out of downtown Carmel—and Chuck Lazzara and his son are pursuing a $20 million mixed-use development called Monon & Main.
Publicly traded Determine Inc. generated fanfare when it announced it was moving its headquarters here and adding 24 jobs to the 35 already here. But many investors have been betting against it for years.
In his decision, Special Judge Matthew Kincaid wrote that the residents of the 1,017-acre area of unincorporated Clay Township did not prove all of the elements necessary to prevent Carmel’s annexation.
The development, proposed by 200 West Partners LLC, would include single-family homes, multifamily housing, and a retail and office building with a restaurant to the west of Sycamore and Main Streets.
Ardagh Group’s glass-packaging division has filed plans with the city of Fishers that show the planned location of its new offices and how many people will work there.
The Well—a not-for-profit that started in Nashville, Tennessee, in 2012—is expected to open by mid-August in The Edge on 116th Street and Lantern Road in Fishers.
The Well—a not-for-profit that started in Nashville, Tennessee, in 2012—is expected to open by mid-August in The Edge on 116th Street and Lantern Road in Fishers.
Determine Inc., which plans to move its headquarters from Silicon Valley to Carmel, released quarterly financial results Thursday afternoon that fell short of analyst expectations.
Chuck Lazzara, who owns the Ritz Charles with his wife, has revealed plans for Monon and Main, a mixed-use project on the southwest corner of Main Street and the Monon Trail.
Noblesville is seeing unexpected demand for three-way liquor licenses in its Riverfront Redevelopment District. Other north-side communities are determining how to distribute additional liquor licenses approved by the state.
Big Hoffa’s Smokehouse Bar-B-Que owner Adam Hoffman is planning to move his restaurant to the northeast corner of Main and East streets—just one-third of a mile from the current location.
The developer of the Harmony community is seeking zoning changes that would allow a gas station and fast food restaurants within the community; many residents are opposed.
A technology exchange is trying to connect low-income individuals to computers and other gear needed to apply for jobs, take online courses and create resumes.
One of the largest environmental consulting firms in the area plans to move its headquarters into a former Golden Corral restaurant by the end of August.
Ardagh Group’s glass-packaging division, which employs more than 200 at its Muncie headquarters, plans to relocate most of those jobs to Fishers by the end of the year.
More than $235 million worth of development is anticipated or already under construction along the roadway through Carmel and Westfield—and that doesn’t include a handful of the projects with undisclosed costs.
In 2014, the seed supply company committed to creating 100 jobs by the end of 2017 as part of a $60 million expansion of its headquarters—and it’s already surpassed that amount.
The Edge, an office and retail development at 116th Street and Lantern Road, has attracted several other tenants, including a coffee shop, rental clothing boutique and eye care center.
The decision by Pittman Partners principal Steve Pittman is the latest sign of strife among siblings of Dr. John Pittman, a Carmel developer who died in 2014. Another sibling, Mark Pittman, now is leading efforts to line up an alternative developer.