Graeter’s opening Carmel location
The Cincinnati-based handmade ice cream shop will occupy 2,032 square feet in the three-story Nash building in the City Center development.
The Cincinnati-based handmade ice cream shop will occupy 2,032 square feet in the three-story Nash building in the City Center development.
When officials brainstormed what the future Strawtown Koteewi Park in Hamilton County would look like, archery wasn’t in the picture. But plans changed as movies like “The Hunger Games” and “Brave” popularized the sport.
The Hamilton County Council approved new pay ranges and a minimum salary for county employees that works out to about $13 per hour.
After years of owning the site, the Carmel Redevelopment Commission is moving forward with a plan to sell the former Party Time Rental property.
A sign company that moved to Fishers in 2014 and snagged an economic incentives deal with the city is backing out of the plan.
The addition, proposed by Gershman Brown Crowley, will encompass nearly four acres on the southeast corner of 116th Street and Springmill Road.
More restaurants are expected to arrive in the retail development near Interstate 69 and Southeastern Parkway in Fishers.
The Grand Rapids, Michigan-based retailer that opened on Carmel Drive in the Old Meridian District in 1994 is adding several new services and upgrading various shopping sections.
Hamilton County elections didn’t have any mayoral upsets, but Boone County saw a shake up.
An economic impact study of the proposed State Road 37 roundabout project predicts there would be $390 million in benefits to the area.
Carmel’s tax increment financing districts have $32 million more in assessed value than projected about a year ago.
The pieces of the Grand Boulevard and Main Street project in Carmel are starting to come together. The senior living facility, hotel, parking garage and apartment complex components have been designed and await final city approval.
The pre-primary campaign finance reports, which were due Friday, show that council members Carol Schleif, Sue Finkam, Eric Seidensticker and Luci Snyder raised less than their challengers in their respected races.
The Fishers Redevelopment Commission recently approved the sale of a parcel of land in the Nickel Plate District for $25,000 to Re/Max Ability Plus. The real estate agency plans to spend $1.8 million to construct a 7,200-square-foot building.
Whitestown is among the first communities to approve adding sexual orientation as a protected class in the wake of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act controversy.
Westfield’s 360-acre sports campus already has 31 soccer fields, and officials intend to plant grass to add the equivalent of seven or eight full-sized fields that can be converted to smaller sizes for youth games.
Fishers Mayor Scott Fadness recently created a task force to study electronic outdoor advertising and make a recommendation to the city on how to proceed with inquiries for digital signage.
Jon Gilman, CEO of Zionsville-based Clear Software, may have been the driving force behind the national media frenzy over the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.
Indianapolis-based T.M. Crowley & Associates recently announced a partnership with Estridge Homes to include 170,000 square feet of retail space within the Harmony community along 146th and Ditch Road in Westfield.