New Canterbury owner begins renovating upscale hotel
Once the work is finished in about nine months, the Canterbury, which will be rebranded as a Le Meridien, should be able to better compete with other upscale downtown hotels, a consultant said.
Once the work is finished in about nine months, the Canterbury, which will be rebranded as a Le Meridien, should be able to better compete with other upscale downtown hotels, a consultant said.
A year-long Keystone Avenue bridge project slated to start next month has prompted the owner of the venerable north-side steakhouse to relocate about a mile north and take over another restaurant space.
The redevelopment of a nearly vacant shopping center at 56th Street and Emerson Avenue will include a Wal-Mart Neighborhood Market and 15,000 square feet of small-shop retail space.
Construction of the building at 6 E. Washington St. downtown is expected to wrap up by the end of the month. It features office space on the upper level with retail space below that will be occupied by Chipotle.
Soupremacy on East Market Street is the brainchild of the franchisee of the local Potbelly restaurant located just around the corner. Plus, new locations for Bub’s Burgers, Sunrise Cafe, Tuscanos Brazilian Grill, and more.
Van Rooy Properties donated a two-building apartment complex on the city’s east side that will enable Progress House to expand the number of beds it provides to recovering alcoholics and drug addicts.
Aldi has purchased the land on Indiana 135 where a Pizza King restaurant and Dannemiller True Value store sit. The company will tear down the buildings to accommodate the new grocery.
The two restaurants are among four new offerings that have either recently opened or will be coming to the Mass Ave area this spring.
Wishard Hospital’s 17 buildings need to be cleaned before Indiana University can acquire the land as part of a swap with the city that cleared the way for the new Eskenazi Health.
Here’s a rundown of some of the restaurant and store closings due to heavy snow and frigid temperatures.
Yolk has signed a lease to occupy 4,410 square feet in the downtown mixed-use development at Delaware and South streets, and is expected to open in the summer.
Owners of the upstart TwoDeep Brewing Co. have signed a long-term lease to occupy the 7,000-square-foot ground level at 714 N. Capitol Ave. They hope to have the brewery and tap room operating by mid-May.
The theater on the city’s near-east side was built in 1927 but has been vacant since 1992. The building’s supporters hope the new roof is the first step in revitalizing what was once the neighborhood’s crown jewel.
Work is progressing on the massive renovation of a historic downtown building in hopes that it will be ready to house a pair of art galleries in the spring. Both the four-story facade and the interior have been stripped.
At 48 stories, Chase Tower is downtown’s tallest building, making it hard to miss the bank’s moniker and logo that now adorn it.
As part of a $150,000 renovation of the first floor, workers are installing three large windows on the historic building’s north side where the originals had been removed and covered long ago with matching limestone.
Hubbard & Cravens plans to open in two downtown locations, restaurant Ember Urban Eatery takes space in the Villaggio, and a family entertainment center expands to Greenwood.
Owners of the micro-brewery have signed a lease for 5,000 square feet of additional space in Irvington, but first they need a zoning variance from the city to start operations there.
A New York artist’s mural will be featured on the north side of the Broad Ripple parking garage to help root the new Art2Art trail on the north side.
Three proposals to develop a city-owned parking lot come with the caveat that they’ll likely need city assistance ranging from “very little” to “a lot.”