Indianapolis Business Journal

AUGUST 28-SEPTEMBER 3, 2017

About 35,000 people work in tech fields in the Indianapolis. In the special feature “Faces of Indy Tech,” Jared Council examines the results of a survey designed to learn more about their demographic features. Also in this week’s issue, Scott Olson explains how robust homebuilding in central Indiana is keeping home prices down. And in A&E Etc., Lou has a raft of features about the architecturally rich city of Columbus, including a preview of an ambitious art-installation project, a review of the new movie bearing the city’s name, and a survey of its culinary surprises.

Front PageBack to Top

Eli Lilly headquarters

Lilly insulin prices come under microscope

Over the past 20 years, while the price of a gallon of milk climbed 23 percent and the sticker on a Dodge Caravan minivan rose 21 percent, the list price of the insulin Humalog shot up 1,157 percent.

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Top StoriesBack to Top

St. Vincent

Pacers lift curtain on $50M downtown training center

Twenty months after breaking ground, the Indiana Pacers on Aug. 24 unveiled the $50 million St. Vincent Center directly across Delaware Street from Bankers Life Fieldhouse, combining team training facilities with health care services for the public. The five-story, 130,000-square-foot facility houses two full-court practice courts—one named for former Pacers coach Bobby “Slick” Leonard and […]

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FocusBack to Top

focus-homevalues-pultewhitestown-23-450bp.jpg

Abundant building keeps home prices low

A new study shows that Indianapolis area home values have increased just 12.8 percent increase over a 15-year period. That’s less than in metro areas on the coasts and even some in the Midwest.

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OpinionBack to Top

LETTER: Senator right on health care

We are hopeful that now the Senate can work together in a bipartisan way to improve our nation’s health care system and ensure that all Americans have quality and affordable health care.

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LETTER: Lobbyist wrong on ethanol

Thanks to ethanol, Indiana farmers and the biofuels industry are saving consumers at the pump, providing higher octane at a lower cost, all while lowering tail pipe emissions.  

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In BriefBack to Top