
Whitestown sees flurry of industrial projects, more on horizon
Ten industrial buildings have been completed within the past 24 months, another three are under construction, and four projects are in the process of getting started.
Ten industrial buildings have been completed within the past 24 months, another three are under construction, and four projects are in the process of getting started.
Indianapolis-based Onyx + East plans to build 64 units near 116th Street and College Avenue. It also has a project in the Village of West Clay and is negotiating for land in the heart of the city.
Two coffee shop hopefuls looking to open on neighboring lots in the Carmel Arts & Design District have learned their divergent fates.
Jessica Lynch and husband Kevin Lynch, an American Hockey League player for the Syracuse Crunch, said they expect to spend $4 million to open the attraction, tentatively called Birdies.
The church is negotiating to purchase a 38-acre property in Fishers about a mile north of a proposed site for its congregation that nearby residents resisted.
In April, Carmel officials put out a call for a developer to construct for-sale housing options on the parcel adjacent to the Carmel fire and police departments.
Nothing Bundt Cakes sells 8-inch and 10-inch bundt cakes, tiered bundt cakes, bundtlets, bundtlet towers and bundtinis. Sub Zero Ice Cream lets you design your own frozen treat.
Joe Nixon Properties LLC and Gradison Design-Build initially had plans to construct eight single-family residential units near Fishers Elementary School, but the now-$30 million project has grown to 60 homes and could get even larger.
Seattle-based running gear retailer Brooks Sports Inc. is considering opening a major distribution warehouse in Whitestown that could generate more than 100 new jobs.
From an idea developed in Noblesville High School’s Innovations program, The Storybook Factory aims to engage young readers as video games and other screens compete for their attention.
CEO David Baxter, who was hired in May 2016, is aiming to marry the best of online retailing with brick-and-mortar stores, to lift the company’s profit margin to where it was five years ago.
Carmel Redevelopment Commission Executive Director Corrie Meyer said the city needs the property so it can extend Fourth Street into the Midtown development and construct a roundabout at Fourth Street and Rangeline Road.
The Cat recently opened in the Arts & Design District and in the same space where The Warehouse abruptly closed earlier this year. It hopes to be a kind of “off-off-Broadway” venue.
In a lawsuit filed in Marion Superior Court, Whitestown is suing the wastewater division of Citizens Energy Group for breach of contract and is seeking a refund for connection fees.
Washington Prime Group Inc. plans to remodel and add retail spaces to the Regal Cinemas theater near the northeast corner of Greyhound Pass and 146th Street.
After years of sitting empty, the former Shapiro’s Delicatessen building in City Center will have a new tenant by next summer.
The plans includes building a public plaza on the east side of the Boone County Courthouse, extending the Big 4 Trail to downtown and constructing a 200-space parking garage.
Urban Vines has a grand opening scheduled in Westfield, and Rails Craft Brew & Eatery is expected to open later this month in Saxony.
Jeff Papa, who served on the council from 2010 to 2015 and again from 2016 until present, announced his decision Monday.
After nearly four years of planning and construction, Noblesville’s Federal Hill Commons is set to open. City leaders are hopeful the park will spur economic development in the area west of the White River and downtown.