INDIANAPOLIS — The Athenaeum was built as a gym in 1894 and still served that purpose under the YMCA umbrella. The Athenaeum Foundation is determined to keep that tradition going, even without the YMCA.

The YMCA shut down its Athenaeum operation on Friday after running the building's gym since 1992. The Athenaeum Foundation decided it will run the gym on its own so the space and equipment do not go to waste.

"We started to think, 'What operators would want to come into this space?'" Athenaeum Foundation president Craig Mince said. "Eventually we said, 'Why don't we just do it ourselves?'"
The gym space will close for several weeks and reopen on May 1. The memberships will start at $45 per month.

Mince said it is vital to keep the gym running for the people who live and work in downtown Indianapolis.
"It really is a community. It's the staff, it's the other patrons of the gym, it's the easy access," Mince said. "A lot of members of this gym walk here on a regular basis, they're in the surrounding communities within a few blocks. It's really created this family dynamic that uses this space."

One of those members, Joyce MacKinnon, credits the Athenaeum YMCA for keeping her health in order as she ages.
"I started silver sneakers a couple of years ago," MacKinnon said. "When I started, my hips hurt and I was taking Advil. I don't have to take Advil anymore."

She's relieved the Athenaeum gym will reopen because of the convenience and community she has there.
"I walk here, and most of us in the class do," MacKinnon said. "We'll all be together. Our community will not falter."
-
Police find fewer machine-gun conversion devices in criminals’ hands
Officials with the Indiana Crime Guns Task Force said they seized 14 of the devices, popularly called Glock switches, in the first six months of this year, fewer than they saw last year.
A quiet Wednesday, storms and heavy rain starting Thursday evening
Thursday starts off quiet before showers and storms move in late in the day. Partly cloudy skies remain. Isolated showers and storms stay down in southern Indiana. Low temperatures in the upper 60s.
New DCS director talks 'challenge' of implementing new child welfare laws
The Indiana Department of Child Services is implementing new laws that will require the state agency to be more transparent when a child dies from abuse or neglect.
Three Indianapolis men sentenced to federal prison for string of armed robberies
Three Indianapolis men have been sentenced to federal prison for a series of armed robberies carried out in July 2024.