INDIANAPOLIS — More than two years after a fire destroyed its original location, Kountry Kitchen is getting ready to break ground on a new building on the north side of Indianapolis.
A groundbreaking ceremony is scheduled for 11:30 a.m. Tuesday near East 19th Street and North College Avenue. Construction is expected to last about eight months.
In January 2020, a two-alarm fire badly damaged the restaurant at 1831 N. College Ave. The owners, Cynthia and Isaac Wilson, were forced to close the North College Avenue location.
But in November 2020, they reopened catering and carryout from inside the Ruckus Building at Massachusetts Avenue.
In 2016 - four years before the fire - Kountry Kitchen received a grant from Insight Development for $400,000 for the expansion of their restaurant - which included adding jobs.
Insight Development is the charitable arm of the Indianapolis Housing Agency.
Kountry Kitchen says nearly $200,000 of that grant went unspent and they will use that money now for the new project.
In January 2020, a GoFundMe raised tens of thousands of dollars, including about $40,000 from Colts Owner Jim Irsay, to help reopen.
-
Advocacy group opposes bills on juvenile justice, homelessness criminalization
Live Free organization says proposed legislation would harm communities most affected by the criminal justice system
Behind the winter work at Beasley's Orchard in Danville
Just because you don't see fruit growing in the winter, that doesn't mean work stops around the orchard.
Constitutional law expert explains student free speech rights amidst walkouts
Constitutional law expert Steve Sanders from the Maurer School of Law at Indiana University Bloomington said students have rights to protest, but those rights come with limitations.
Deputy's widow files wrongful death lawsuit against drivers involved in crash
The widow of Delaware County Deputy Blake Reynolds has filed a wrongful death lawsuit alleging two trucking companies and their drivers were negligent.