INDIANAPOLIS — The Indy 500 only happens once a year, but the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Museum is ready to give visitors that race day experience every day.

The museum will reopen Wednesday after spending $60 million on a complete renovation. It was closed for a year and a half while it was under reconstruction.
"We've finally created a world-class museum devoted to the Indianapolis 500, and now it's up to the public to validate that," said museum president Joe Hale.

The new museum experience features a recreation of Gasoline Alley through the years, a movie that captures the traditions leading up to race day, and a prominent rotating podium for the Borg-Warner trophy.
Hale said he's most proud of the interactive elements, such as places to practice changing a tire or driving a lap in a race simulator.

"You're not walking into what may appear to be an indoor parking lot anymore," Hale said. "We have a museum that's immersive, participatory, and educational."
The outside of the building is mostly unchanged from its current structure, which opened in 1976. However, the construction within the walls doubled the amount of available exhibit space.

Hale hopes it leaves a lasting impression on both Hoosiers and visitors.
"I don't care where you go in the world. If you mention you're from Indianapolis or from Indiana, typically that person is going to know us because of the Indy 500," Hale said.

Tickets are available at this link.
-
New Boone County nonprofit offers financial help for drug court participants
A new nonprofit aims to give people in Boone County problem-solving court programs a financial boost that participants say can make the difference between staying on track and returning to addiction.
Watch Us Farm expanding services for kids and adults with disabilities
Watch Us Farm currently helps job train around 12 people a year; this expansion will allow them to serve around 100.
Carmel continues talks to move public meetings to daytime hours
Carmel Mayor Sue Finkam is pushing to move some city meetings to the middle of the workday, a proposal that has divided elected officials.
East side neighbors shaken after deadly shooting, police kill wanted suspect
Neighbors on Indianapolis' east side are still on edge after a deadly shooting Saturday morning left a 64-year-old man dead and raised questions about community safety.