Developers plan about 150 single-family houses and town houses in Westfield
City Council members heard plans for the 44-acre Finley Creek Estates and the 11-acre Westfield Yard developments this week.
City Council members heard plans for the 44-acre Finley Creek Estates and the 11-acre Westfield Yard developments this week.
Permit filings had risen on a year-over-year basis for 11 straight months before June’s decrease.
The fourth Ale Emporium is expected to open next spring in a retail center that includes a Rural King and D-Bat baseball academy.
The project is expected to include existing and new-to-market restaurant concepts occupying lots ranging from 1 to 2 acres.
Indianapolis Mayor Joe Hogsett plans to travel to Columbus, Ohio, this week for the Major League Soccer All-Star Game as part of an ongoing effort to land an expansion club for the city.
For years, transforming Westfield’s downtown into a vibrant, happening place has been a much-discussed but never-realized goal. Now, the first-term mayor is pushing to make the redevelopment of downtown more than just a talking point.
Work on Indiana University Health’s $4.3 billion downtown hospital campus, one of the most expensive construction projects in Indiana history, is set to be finished in late 2027.
Five years after Indianapolis-based Kite bought the shopping center, the developer has invested in utilities, signage and infrastructure and is adding eye-catching tenants West Elm, Williams Sonoma and Bluemercury.
The process used to determine how people are policed did not include civilians.
The AgriNovus Indiana report quantifies agbiosciences as contributing $22.7 billion to the state’s gross domestic product. It also identifies several key areas of opportunity for growth in this sector.
Old Meridian Apartments, a $60 million proposed project by Cross Development LLC, was called off because the city’s incentive for the project was not enough to make it feasible for the developer.
The Neoclassical-style building at 100 S. Walnut St. was the Hamilton North Public Library’s North Branch before it closed last year due to decreasing use and budget constraints.
An investment group led by Indiana Pacers owner Herb Simon and his family said Thursday it plans to spend at least $300 million to construct a 13-story luxury hotel and connected 4,000-seat theater on the property after demolition of the existing century-old building.
Excluding gas prices and auto sales, retail sales rose 0.8%.
Known as Winterton, the project would consist of 574 apartments across two buildings, along with more than 14,000 square feet of retail space and a 756-space interior parking structure.
Proscenium III would feature 151 apartments, a 125-room boutique hotel, 63,000 square feet of office space, 15,000 square feet of retail space, 508 parking spaces and a public plaza
The plan is likely to prove controversial among economists, including many Democrats. Experts on both sides of the aisle tend to argue that government limits on rent discourage new development by making it less lucrative.
The expansion plan includes construction of a 100,000-square-foot building on its corporate campus and the addition of 100 jobs.
The state’s largest health care provider said the five-story hospital will include 140 beds, 17 emergency department exam rooms, and six operating rooms.
The 7,500-seat Fishers Event Center is scheduled to open in November at the Yard at Fishers District, southeast of Ikea.