North suburban companies plan expansions, hundreds of jobs
A number of companies in Hamilton County and Boone County have quietly made expansion commitments in recent months.
A number of companies in Hamilton County and Boone County have quietly made expansion commitments in recent months.
First taking root in southern Indiana, Big Woods Restaurants is planning its northernmost outpost yet. And construction is under way on a $15 million athletic facility in Noblesville.
A longtime state senator has left the Statehouse. A state representative is running for a countywide office. A Noblesville city councilor is running for state office. And that’s not all.
The city of Fishers is trying to prevent vacant (or soon-to-be-vacant) properties that housed grocery stores from being redeveloped without city oversight.
The 155-acre development would wrap around the Golf Club of Indiana, which would remain open to the public and under the same management.
In a project expected to cost $2.5 million, synthetic turf will be installed on the infields of 18 of the 26 diamonds at the sports park.
The nearly 22,000-square-foot grocery is part of the chain’s aggressive renovation and expansion campaign. Also in the roundup: three new eateries, two salons, two boutiques and two dentist offices.
Expected to be an annual tradition, the holiday extravaganza kicks off Saturday. Organizers have been surprised by the level of participation from independent vendors.
Daniel Hubbard intends to construct paired patio homes and an assisted living facility on a 19-acre property along 126th Street, if city officials approve his rezoning request.
The event, called Stay at Home for HAND, is scheduled for 6 p.m. Saturday, but there is no venue, dinner, cash bar or program.
A new ownership group based in central Indiana recently acquired the 193,000-square-foot building, which now is vacant.
The Custom Electronic Design and Installation Association plans to break ground on the 40,000-square-foot building Nov. 8.
The dry cleaner counts more than 450 locations worldwide, but hasn’t had a presence in Indiana until now. Also in the roundup: more pizza joints and ice cream shops.
With the first tenant in hand, the developers of the 300-acre NorthPoint project in Westfield are eager to attract more of the same.
D-A Lubricant Co. Inc., which relocated to the Lebanon Business Park in 2011, will receive a tax break for boosting production at its 250,000-square-foot headquarters.
The three-story, 65,000-square-foot sports-entertainment complex isn’t waiting long for the hubbub to subside over the openings of its across-the-street neighbors from Sweden and Chicago.
A taco joint operator that has 392 locations in 23 states plans to open as many as a dozen locations in central Indiana in the coming years.
The Reserve at Cool Creek in northeast Carmel would target residents ages 55 and older and include as many as 157 villa and ranch homes.
Indianapolis-based Platinum Properties Management Co. LLC envisions a mix of townhouses and detached homes along the south side of 126th Street to west of Auman Drive and east of Gramercy.
Attorney Matt Price, engineer Andrew Heard and business coach Paul McCoy teamed up to purchase the 13-acre property in 2015, concerned about projects other developers might want to pursue there.