Roundup: Einstein bagel shops closing, Under Armour coming to Fashion Mall
The downtown Einstein location and the chain's Fishers store closed Tuesday—joining another location that shut down in recent months—as part of a company reorganization.
The downtown Einstein location and the chain's Fishers store closed Tuesday—joining another location that shut down in recent months—as part of a company reorganization.
The new owner of 17 buildings in the southwest-side industrial park has filed to reorganize $12.6 million in debt as the lender seeks to foreclose.
Parking on the east side of downtown is becoming harder to find—enough to prompt some rates to rise—thanks to a trio of real estate developments replacing surface parking lots.
The specialty grocer has committed to occupying 35,000 square feet at Browning Investments’ apartment-and-retail project along the Central Canal. Construction is set to begin next month.
Flaherty & Collins execs joined city officials Wednesday morning to break ground on the $121 million, 28-story downtown development, which was renamed 360 Market Square. Design changes have shaved about 70 feet from the tower’s originally planned height.
Mike Cunningham, who operates Bru Burger on Mass Ave, plans to open another, on the property where the Glass Chimney and casual sibling Deeter’s once stood.
After buying 500 N. Meridian in June, Ambrose Property Group has snagged three major tenants from OneAmerica Tower.
The chain will occupy 2,500 square feet on the ground level of the 3 Mass building at the head of the bustling avenue and should be open within the next few months.
Executives of Flaherty & Collins Properties will join city officials Wednesday to turn dirt on the site, kicking off construction of the $121 million, 28-story apartment project anchored by a Whole Foods store.
The developer has scaled down the size of the project by reducing the height of one building and trimming the number of overall units in hopes of winning approval from the town’s plan commission.
Sales per square foot are down, the building itself is aging, and persuading the lone anchor, Carson Pirie Scott, to stay another three years required generous incentives.
Plans to build a gas station and convenience store on the site of the historic church received a positive recommendation Thursday, moving the matter to the Metropolitan Development Commission next month.
The owners of the popular pie place founded in Irvington hope to have their third spot operating by mid-April, just down the street from Triton Brewing Co.
Beside beer joints, a breakfast cafe is coming to the Switch development in Fishers, while a couple of Texas Roadhouse-owned restaurants are putting down stakes on the south side.
Locally based Zink Architecture & Development is buying the vacant building near the intersection of College and Massachusetts avenues and plans to renovate it for restaurant use.
Built in 1927, the city-owned landmark has served as the Indiana Repertory Theatre’s home for 35 years. The city and the not-for-profit are working on a lease renewal.
Local preservationists are rallying to save the 101-year-old church from being razed to make way for a gas station and convenience store. Its congregation wants to start fresh in a new facility.
The restaurant chain wants to open in part of the former Nordstrom space downtown, but proposed designs have struck out with the Indianapolis Historic Preservation Commission.
The new owner of the garage on East Market Street is investing $2 million to refurbish the facility in hopes of reopening it in June.
The last five acres of a seven-acre site where Tutwiler Automotive long operated is for sale with an asking price of $1 million per acre.