This article was originally published by WFYI, a Free Press Indiana partner.

By Jill Sheridan, WFYI

Plans for the redevelopment of Circle Centre Mall are underway with a move to sell the space in the heart of downtown Indianapolis.

The Circle Centre Development Company (CCDC), a partnership of investors that owns the mall, solicited ideas for redevelopment last year. 

Hendricks Commercial Properties, the developer behind the Bottleworks, offered up a mixed-use vision. President and CEO Rob Gerbitz said the overall growth of downtown investment influenced its proposal.

“This is an opportunity to be a connector with what we would see it becoming into the future,” Gerbitz said.

Envisioned under Indianapolis Mayor William Hudnut, Circle Centre Mall opened in the mid 1990s and thrived for years. Current Mayor Joe Hogsett said that at the time the development transformed downtown Indianapolis.

“It truly was a standard bearer for urban, retail malls,” Hogsett said. “But that was 30 years ago.”

Hendricks will purchase the mall property as part of the agreement. The $600 million project will gut the inside of the space to create a pedestrian promenade but preserve many of the buildings along the outside of the mall. Some of those buildings, including the old L.S. Ayres building on the north side of the property, have historical relevance.

Gerbitz said his company has a proven record of uniting past and present development, as evidenced at Bottleworks.

“Because of the iconic nature of those buildings,” he said.

  • A courtyard
  • An exterior shot of the stairway and courtyard
  • An outdoor stairway
  • A bridge walkway over a street
  • A view from a window of the planned redevelopment
  • A downtown plaza
  • A bird's eye view of the a downtown development

Hogsett said these redevelopment plans, which include retail, entertainment and housing spaces, will be a better fit for the downtown development pipeline. 

“By changing an urban downtown mall into a multi-faceted, multi-purpose downtown destination location,” Hogsett said.

The north-south stretch of the existing mall will be transformed into an outdoor pedestrian promenade. The Arts Garden will be detached from the structure to build a grand stairway entrance into the space.

A final agreement that includes city-backed tax credits and state support has not been finalized. The city currently owns parts of the land, including the parking garages.

Construction will be completed in phases that will take years. Hendricks said it will work closely with current tenants to minimize disruptions.

Contact WFYI city government and policy reporter Jill Sheridan at jsheridan@wfyi.org.

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