Midtown office building undergoes massive interior makeover
The building, once fully occupied by State Auto Insurance, has been revitalized under new ownership and attracted a couple of key tenants.
The building, once fully occupied by State Auto Insurance, has been revitalized under new ownership and attracted a couple of key tenants.
The university will help convert the former Shelby Bowl building into a Books & Brews taproom as part of the school’s efforts to attract more development to the area surrounding the south-side campus.
MoFoCo, formerly known as the Monon Food Co., closed its original Broad Ripple location on Sunday.
Square Deal is purchasing the 30-story building from Zeller Realty, which put it on the market in the summer after spending millions on renovations and improving occupancy.
At 138,800 square feet, it’s downtown’s 19th-largest office complex. But the building played a major role in the city’s efforts in becoming a sports town worthy of hosting a Super Bowl.
The residential redevelopment of the sprawling Simon estate on Ditch Road known as Asherwood that local homebuilder Paul Estridge Jr. announced late last year might not happen after all.
Local developer Keystone Group is nearing a deal to buy the 20-story building just north of Monument Circle and is considering a range of possibilities for the half-million-square-foot property.
Condado Tacos commits to Broad Ripple, with plans for a downtown location, while Burger Study opens Monday amid fierce competition in the upscale burger segment.
Birge & Held snatched the Maxwell and Mozzo buildings out of Milhaus Development’s apartment portfolio, which has been on the market since February.
Property owners are voting on establishing a precisely targeted district that would help them pay for improvements to the up-and-coming neighborhoods.
The latest offer calls for the developer to build the Murat Temple Association a 40,000-square-foot headquarters as part of a larger hotel project on the downtown site of the Murat Shrine Temple.
The developer of the massive $260 million project is planning for space to host a broad mix of vendors, ranging from seafood purveyors and fruit-and-vegetable stands to restaurants of various sizes.
More than 6.8 million square feet of industrial space is expected to be constructed in the Indianapolis area in 2017, the most ever in a single year.
King Park Development Corp. is partnering with two builders on the project, known as Monon16, to bring a mix of affordable and market-rate housing to the up-and-coming King Park area.
The Riley Area Development Corp. has purchased the nearly 120-year-old structure northeast of the Circle City Industrial Complex and hopes to lure micro-manufacturers to the space.
The restaurant had been open for 10 years, moving in 2011 from Westfield Boulevard to Broad Ripple Avenue, where it served up its signature patties.
One eatery is set to take 10,000 square feet in the city’s oldest skyscraper and the other will fill the spot vacated by the Colts Grille.
Sisters Carly Swift and Mandy Selke of Just Pop In are expanding the business in a 5,000-square-foot building under construction on Cornell Avenue.
The Spanish-inspired eatery opened in 2007 and weathered the recession. It leaves a high-profile location at the northeast corner of Ohio and Delaware streets.
The local office of Lee & Associates plans to more than double the number of brokers it devotes to the sector, as industrial vacancy remains solidly in the single digits.