INDIANAPOLIS — Indy Eleven and Keystone Group have released their next steps and renderings of the neighborhood village development planned for downtown Indianapolis.
According to a news release Friday morning, the development, anchored by a 20,000-seat stadium which will be home to the Indy Eleven professional soccer team, will have a groundbreaking in May 2023.
On Thursday, the release says, filings were made to rezone the area currently housing Diamond Chain.
This is the area bordered by West Street, Kentucky Avenue and the White River on the southwest side of downtown Indy.
The area is also expected to house 205,000 square feet of office space, more than 600 apartments, 197,000 square feet of retail space, restaurants, public plazas, parking garages and a hotel.
"The vision of this transformational development into a live, work, and play village is becoming reality. Eleven Park will not only change the skyline of Indianapolis, but will add over a thousand jobs, have a huge economic impact, create quality of life benefits and attract talent and opportunities to our city and state," said Ersal Ozdemir, chairman and founder of Keystone Group and Indy Eleven. "We’ve been investing in downtown for over 20 years and believe it is important now more than ever.”
The land for Eleven Park borders West Street, Kentucky Avenue and the White River in downtown Indianapolis.
The stadium is expected to be completed in summer 2025.
The City of Indianapolis provided the following statement:
The City continues to engage with the Indy Eleven and Keystone on their plans for Indy Eleven Park. Located near significant city infrastructure investments, the site is critical for the future of downtown and activation of the White River.
-
IMPD investigating after person found dead on Indy's east side
Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department officers responded to the 1500 block of North Arlington Avenue on reports of a person shot just after 8:30 p.m.Indiana’s oldest Black American Legion post to close, members trying to save it
The flags that symbolize service no longer fly in front of Tillman H. Harpole American Legion Post 249, whose charter dates back to the late 1930s.High school construction students build homes for veterans
Trade school students spent the week building several homes at the Project 57 development near Michigan Street and Holt Road. It will become a neighborhood for homeless veterans.Indianapolis Ten-Point Coalition working to prevent violence before it starts
The group was patrolling the BP Gas Station at 29th and MLK Thursday night when group members noticed two young men with guns walk into the gas station.