Sanctuary Brewing setting up shop on South College Avenue
David Worthington, who in 2013 launched Brewery Tours of Indianapolis, now is tapping into the burgeoning craft beer scene with Sanctuary Brewing Co. It should open by Labor Day.
David Worthington, who in 2013 launched Brewery Tours of Indianapolis, now is tapping into the burgeoning craft beer scene with Sanctuary Brewing Co. It should open by Labor Day.
The Riley Area Development Corp. has proposed placing the container near Davlan Park at the northeast corner of Massachusetts Avenue and Alabama Street to compensate for the loss of galleries in the district.
The school district is using a bidding process to attempt to unload the vacant buildings, including the downtown Phillips Temple.
Ben Hunter, who represents the district where the church faces demolition, said he doesn’t plan to challenge the rezoning of the property. The full council is expected to vote on the matter Monday evening.
HHGregg Inc. has tried for four years to reverse sliding sales. That hasn’t worked, and now executives have turned their focus to slashing expenses in a quest to return to profitability next year.
Lincoln Square Pancake House and a yet-to-be-named steak and seafood chophouse have committed to the Millikan on Mass project, joining Nine Irish Brothers at the apartment and retail development.
In one fell swoop, the law firm more than doubled the size of its intellectual property team with the additions it scored from Krieg DeVault. The move could bring as much as $10 million in annual revenue to Taft.
King Park Development Corp. is pursuing another developer to rehab the building on East 16th Street after a Noblesville firm pulled out of a deal to convert part of it into a hub for food-and-beverage startups.
Dr. Keith March at the IU School of Medicine is almost like a medical superhero, churning out patents at warp speed.
Julie Bombacino developed a nutritional food blend for her disabled son that’s now turned into a full-fledged business producing packets for people who need feeding tubes to eat.
The Scotty’s Brewhouse location on East 96th Street will undergo a massive renovation in July when the restaurant will close for about a week.
Merchants Affordable Housing Corp. plans to spend at least $30 million to buy and rehab 10 buildings, most of them north of downtown.
Cleveland-based Red The Steakhouse is slated to take the street-level space at 14 W. Maryland St. Also downtown: Georgia Reese’s Southern Table & Bar will begin welcoming patrons on Friday.
The Eagle restaurant for Southern cuisine won’t be moving into part of Stout’s Shoes after all. It has signed a lease to occupy a bigger space just a stone’s throw away.
The longtime distributor of printing cartridges hopes to fetch $3.3 million for the nearly 3-acre site in the Cottage Home neighborhood. It hopes to stay downtown but in smaller digs.
The Indianapolis-based appliance and electronics retailer on Friday posted a quarterly loss of $25.2 million as sales for store locations open at least a year declined 10 percent.
Flaherty & Collins Properties already is selling a stake in its brand new downtown Axis at Block 400 apartment development to cover expensive cost overruns on the project.
The developer of the mixed-use Pulliam Square project intended to salvage most of the building, but as IBJ reported last month, ultimately chose to demolish the structure.
Cleveland-based Red, the Steakhouse has agreed to occupy the ground level of the building at 14 W. Maryland St., last home to 14 West Restaurant and Suites.
Owner Pat Sullivan has purchased nine rental homes surrounding the store and plans to double the size of its lawn and garden center to stay competitive with big-box competitors.