Four retail buildings on tap for Anson development
Midland Atlantic Development Co. LLC has filed plans for a $13 million to $15 million project on a 6.4 acre property near the northeast corner of Whitestown Parkway and Perry Worth Road.
Midland Atlantic Development Co. LLC has filed plans for a $13 million to $15 million project on a 6.4 acre property near the northeast corner of Whitestown Parkway and Perry Worth Road.
City officials could create a committee to examine the impact of online lodging services. Carmel has come out against them, and state legislators are weighing a bill prohibiting cities from banning them.
The 180-room hotel had been expected to open by July 2016, to align with the peak of the summer sports season, but the proposal never received approval and construction never started.
The properties, in Carmel and Zionsville, had been owned by the late Dr. John Norman Pittman and were sold in three separate transactions.
The Noblesville City Council approved spending up to $3.75 million for planning, design, permitting and property acquisition on Tuesday night.
Noble Roman’s Craft Pizza & Pub is described as “a modernization and redesign” of the original Noble Roman’s pizzeria concept, which originated in 1972.
Carmel Clay Schools District Superintendent Dr. Nicholas Wahl made a presentation to the school board Monday night in favor of asking voters to approve a referendum that would keep the current school tax rate at its current level.
The city of Carmel’s huge investment of public dollars into its central core has paid off when it comes to generating economic activity, jobs and additional investment in the area, according to a new study by the IU Public Policy Institute.
Opposition is growing to the city of Carmel’s order that homeowners remove their properties from Airbnb listings.
The Golf Club of Indiana wants players to improve year round—and it also wants customers at its facility in Whitestown year round.
The city announced Tuesday that it sent letters to residents who rent out their homes on Airbnb, notifying them that they are in violation of city zoning laws and demanding they cease operations.
The Noblesville-based not-for-profit has proposed a $2.1 million project to build residential units on a 2.4-acre property between 105th and 106th streets, east of McPherson Street.
A bill authored by Rep. Jerry Torr would give the right-of-way to large trucks in roundabouts throughout Indiana. Carmel has already passed a local version of the law.
Indianapolis-based Katz Sapper & Miller LLP will advise, drive and support the project to modernize the city’s business systems.
Carmel’s population has grown by 7,755 people since 2010, the city announced Wednesday, citing a partial special census it conducted late last year.
The 300-plus-acre office, retail and residential project, which will be located near the southeast corner of U.S. 31 and State Road 38, to the west of Grassy Branch Road, is being pursued by developer Chris R. White.
The Carmel City Council approved two ordinances Monday night that Clerk-Treasurer Christine Pauley sees as political moves against her.
The district’s school board voted Tuesday to have a special election May 2 to ask residents for a tax hike to raise $90 million.
Don Wettrick, who introduced an innovations class at Noblesville High School in 2014, wanted to expand his curriculum to other schools so it could have a bigger impact.
Visitors spent nearly $681 million in the county in 2015, with most of the dollars used for food and beverages. That’s a 12 percent boost over 2014, nearly double the increase for the overall metro area.