Bradley Ridge Zionsville: The Complete 2026 Guide

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By | Luxury Real Estate Advisor & Former Chubb Group Appraiser


The most unexpected luxury amenity in Indianapolis isn’t a golf course, a Pete Dye fairway, or a rooftop bar. It’s a campground. A literal campground: fire rings, wooded tent sites, starlit skies, sitting inside a gated community where homes start at $1.3 million. That is Bradley Ridge. A 350-acre luxury development on the US-421 corridor in Zionsville, Indiana, where a decorated World War II pilot and Eli Lilly executive chose to spend his life outdoors, and where the developer charged with honoring that legacy had the good sense not to pave it over. This article covers everything serious buyers need to know about Bradley Ridge: the land’s history, the developer’s track record, the full amenity stack, the lot and builder landscape, and the market data that determines whether this community is the right fit, and the right timing, for your purchase. As a CLHMS-certified luxury advisor and former high-value property appraiser, I’ve analyzed this land closely, and the story runs deeper than the amenity list.


What Is Bradley Ridge?

Bradley Ridge is a 350-acre gated luxury residential community located in Zionsville, Indiana (ZIP code 46077), developed by Henke Development Group, a Westfield-based firm widely regarded as Central Indiana’s most accomplished luxury community builder. The project represents a total investment value of approximately $700 million and will ultimately include 290 single-family homes when fully built out. Lot sizes range from 0.2 acres at the village scale to over 5 acres at the estate level, an unusually broad spectrum for a single gated community. Home prices begin at $1.3 million. Situated along the US Highway 421 corridor, Bradley Ridge sits directly between Holliday Farms to the north and the Carpenter Nature Preserve to the south, placing it at the geographic and conceptual heart of Zionsville’s luxury real estate market. Residents are served by Zionsville Community Schools, ranked among the top school districts in Indiana. Phase 1 lots are now available.

The address is 1310 US-421, Zionsville, IN 46077. The property is bisected by a full mile of Eagle Creek, contains three riparian corridors, approximately 140 acres of mature woodland, and 100 acres of floodplain: natural features that make this site genuinely unlike the cleared, graded parcels typical of suburban luxury development. Henke Development Group purchased the property in 2020 and received Zionsville Town Council approval (on a 6-1 vote) in April 2024 following nine months of community negotiations that ultimately resulted in a denser, more nature-preserving plan than originally proposed.


The Land’s Story: Who Was Buck Bradley?

Charles Harvey “Buck” Bradley was not a typical man whose name ends up on a subdivision sign.

He was born and raised in Indianapolis. He attended The Park School, the same school where he first met a classmate named John Holliday. From The Park School, both men went to Yale, where Buck earned his degree from the Yale School of Law and where lifelong friendships formed, including with a classmate named George Herbert Walker Bush. After Yale, Buck moved quickly through private practice, making partner at Thompson, O’Neal & Smith in 1953. But private practice didn’t hold him. In the early 1960s, he returned to Indianapolis and joined Eli Lilly and Company, one of the most consequential pharmaceutical corporations in American history, as an Assistant Attorney and Secretary to the Board. Over the course of more than 25 years, he rose to General Counsel and Senior Vice President. He retired in the late 1980s.

But before Yale Law School, before Eli Lilly, before a career navigating the legal and strategic affairs of a global pharmaceutical giant, Buck Bradley flew combat missions for the United States Marine Corps. He was a decorated dive bomber pilot in World War II and later the Korean Conflict, who earned nine Air Medals and three Distinguished Flying Crosses. The man who would eventually advise one of America’s great corporations was first a man who flew missions in defense of it.

After retirement, Buck Bradley brought President George H.W. Bush, his classmate and lifelong friend, to this 350-acre property in Zionsville for relaxation and camaraderie. The land that is now Bradley Ridge was, for decades, a private retreat for a man who had spent his career at the intersection of American business, law, and national service.

And then there is the thread that connects Bradley Ridge to the community next door.

Buck Bradley and John Holliday were not just Yale contemporaries. They were schoolmates from The Park School in Indianapolis: two men whose friendship began in childhood and ran through Yale and across the arc of their adult lives. John Holliday loved this same land, this same stretch of US-421 corridor, this same topography of rolling hills and woodland and creek. The community that now bears the Holliday name, Holliday Farms, which sits directly adjacent to Bradley Ridge on US-421, was originally the Holliday family’s property. Two friends from the same school, the same university, the same world, whose land now shares a fence line and whose stories share a philosophy: that the best way to live is with land under your feet, open sky above, and nature close enough to touch.

The campground at Bradley Ridge isn’t a marketing gimmick. It is an expression of who Buck Bradley was. A man who flew combat missions and ran the legal affairs of a global pharmaceutical company didn’t want his land to become a place where people park their BMWs and never go outside. Henke Development Group has said as much directly: they are honored to be entrusted with preserving Buck Bradley’s legacy through the thoughtful development of his former estate. The campground, a genuine community campground with fire rings and wooded sites, is his legacy embedded in the DNA of the development.

Has any other luxury residential community in America built a campground as a permanent HOA amenity? In researching this question, I have not found a comparable example. Glamping destinations exist. Outdoor resort communities exist. But a community campground as a permanent, deeded feature inside a gated $1.3M+ neighborhood, built because the land’s history demanded it, appears to be singular. That distinction is worth understanding before you look at a single floor plan.


The Developer: Henke Development Group

To evaluate Bradley Ridge, you have to evaluate Henke Development Group. You cannot separate the two.

Henke Development Group is a Westfield-based firm founded by Steve Henke. His son Brad Henke handles development and brokerage. The firm’s portfolio spans some of Central Indiana’s most significant luxury communities, and the through-line across all of them is the same: deeply amenitized, nature-connected, long build-out timelines, and a quality of finished product that produces sustained appreciation.

The portfolio context:

Chatham Hills (Westfield): Henke’s flagship Westfield community. Two Pete Dye-designed golf courses: a 9-hole executive course and a championship 18-hole course. A 60,000+ square-foot private clubhouse that includes a bowling alley, indoor basketball court, indoor and outdoor pools, fitness center, six tennis courts, eight pickleball courts, and multiple dining options. Chatham Hills hosted the LIV Golf Individual Championship in 2025. It is the most amenity-rich residential community in the Westfield market, and arguably in Central Indiana.

Holliday Farms (Zionsville): Henke’s proof-of-concept for the luxury corridor. A 600-acre golf community on the adjacent John Holliday property along US-421, featuring Pete Dye-designed golf courses (the 18-hole championship course opened in June 2021 and was named one of the top 12 new courses in the world by Links Magazine), a nearly 79,000-square-foot clubhouse, and eight planned residential neighborhoods. Holliday Farms is the direct predecessor to Bradley Ridge: same road, same philosophy, same developer. In the past year, Holliday Farms recorded 17 new construction closings ranging from $1,170,000 to $4,604,820, at an average sold price of $379 per square foot, the highest average per-square-foot figure of any new construction community in the Greater Indianapolis luxury market. That number is the Henke track record made concrete.

Promontory of Zionsville: A 321-acre private lake community on US-421, anchored by a 35-acre lake, with equestrian fields, stables, and walking paths. Eighty homes ranging from $1.5 million to $4 million.

Grand Park Village (Westfield): A mixed-use community adjacent to the Grand Park Sports Campus.

Bradley Ridge is Henke Development Group’s most ambitious project to date on a per-acre basis. At $700 million total value across 350 acres, the scale of land-to-investment is significant. And unlike Holliday Farms, which was anchored by a golf course, Bradley Ridge is anchored by something rarer and harder to replicate: a living waterway, a nature preserve, and the authentic history of a man whose life earned the land its name.

The Henke formula has a consistent output: communities that look like aspirational pricing in Phase 1 and look like proven value five years later. That pattern is relevant to every conversation about Bradley Ridge’s current market position.


Inside Bradley Ridge: Amenities, Nature & Design

The community amenity anchor is a Napa Valley-inspired clubhouse, an architectural statement rendered in the warm-toned, vineyard-country aesthetic, that sets the tone before you’ve seen a single home. It is a design choice that communicates something specific: this is a community where social life is expected to happen, where the building itself is an invitation.

From there, the amenity stack divides into three layers.

The Nature Core

Eagle Creek runs through the heart of the property for a full mile, a living, functioning waterway that shapes lot configurations on both sides, creates natural acoustic buffering throughout the community, and provides the kind of riparian edge that can’t be engineered after the fact. Two hundred fifty homes sit east of the creek, forming the primary residential hub anchored by the clubhouse, pools, and fitness amenities. Forty estate lots sit west of it, designated for lower-density conservation character in keeping with Zionsville’s Rural Michigan Road Overlay, and home to the nature preserve and campground. The creek is not a backdrop. It’s a spine, and Zionsville Plan Commission’s 2024 PUD approval specifically required a 12-foot-wide multi-use trail running the length of Eagle Creek, and a bridge connecting the two sides of the community, as conditions of approval (Dockets 2025-12-DP and 2025-13-DP).

Adjacent to the creek system: a fishing pond with light watercraft access — kayaking, catch-and-release fishing, a way to engage with water that doesn’t require a marina or a boat lift. A 30-acre nature preserve is permanently set aside within the community, connected by over a mile of hiking and scenic trail. A trail along Eagle Creek links to the future 215-acre Carpenter Nature Preserve (formerly Wolf Run Golf Course), which sits immediately to the south.

And then the campground. Wooded sites, fire rings, the kind of stillness that disappears from most gated communities the moment the first street lamp goes in. It is Buck Bradley’s legacy. It is also, practically speaking, an amenity unlike anything available at Holliday Farms, Chatham Hills, or any comparable community in this market.

The Active Amenity Layer

  • Indoor and outdoor pools
  • Pickleball courts
  • Youth baseball and soccer fields
  • Modern fitness center with current equipment
  • Golf simulator lounge

The Social Infrastructure

  • Bar & Grill on-site
  • Napa-inspired clubhouse as a year-round gathering anchor

For context: Chatham Hills, Henke’s Westfield community, has a Pete Dye golf course and a bowling alley. Henke does not build lite. Bradley Ridge’s amenity stack is what an outdoor-forward, nature-first version of the Henke philosophy looks like. The trade-off is intentional. This community is not for the buyer who wants a tee time. It’s for the buyer who wants to kayak to their fishing pond, then sit by a fire at the campground, then have dinner at the Bar & Grill.


Lots, Builders & Homes

Bradley Ridge will include 290 single-family homes at full buildout, the maximum allowable density under the approved PUD ordinance. Phase 1 lots are currently available. The Zionsville Plan Commission has structured the build-out in distinct sections: Section 1A encompasses 50 lots; Section 1B, largely within the 172-acre western and central portion of the property, comprises 40 estate lots; Section 1C adds 75 lots. The phased structure paces development deliberately, a consistent Henke signature that prevents oversupply and supports sustained price discovery through each stage.

The lot range, from 0.2 acres to over 5 acres, is one of the more unusual features of this community’s structure. The 0.2-acre village lots position the entry tier competitively. The 5-acre-plus estate lots position the upper tier alongside the private estate market, not just the production luxury tier. A 5-acre lot inside a gated community with this amenity infrastructure is a different product category than a 5-acre rural parcel with no services. The land premium on those estate lots will widen as the community matures.

The approved builder roster reflects the same range:

  • Foxlane Homes: production-custom hybrid; accessible entry point with reliable execution
  • Bailey Weiler Design + Build: high-end custom architecture; among the region’s most design-forward builders
  • Carrington Homes: established luxury builder with a proven track record in the Indianapolis market
  • AR Homes by Arthur Rutenberg: franchise luxury builder with national design resources and Indianapolis-local execution
  • Executive Homes: custom semi-custom; flexible for buyers who want control without full custom overhead
  • G&G Custom Homes: full custom, high-finish residential; for buyers with detailed design programs

The current MLS inventory includes one active listing: 1715 Templewood Drive, a 5-bedroom, 8,226-square-foot home offered at $4,649,000. I address this specific listing’s market position in the data section below.

The builder range is architecturally significant. Bradley Ridge is not a one-size community. A $1.5 million family home built by Foxlane and a $4 million estate built by Bailey Weiler can coexist on the same private road without one undermining the other, because the lot sizes, setbacks, and ARB requirements hold the visual standard. That range also means Bradley Ridge can absorb multiple buyer profiles simultaneously, which supports absorption pace and ultimately comps.


Location: The US-421 Luxury Corridor

US-421, known as Michigan Road, is the spine of the Zionsville luxury residential market. It runs northwest out of Indianapolis into Boone County, threading through the highest concentration of gated, amenitized, large-lot communities in the metro area. Bradley Ridge sits on this corridor at a particularly advantageous position: directly between Holliday Farms to the north and the Carpenter Nature Preserve to the south.

That positioning is not incidental. Holliday Farms to the north is an established, mature community. The Carpenter Nature Preserve to the south is a permanent green buffer. Bradley Ridge has institutional neighbors on two sides, which means it is not staring at vacant cornfields waiting for the next rezoning cycle. The context is set.

Distance and access:

  • Approximately 30 minutes northwest of downtown Indianapolis
  • Approximately 15–20 minutes to Carmel’s Arts & Design District and Keystone at the Crossing
  • Direct route via US-421 to Indianapolis’s corporate north side (Meridian Corridor)
  • Approximately 5 minutes to the Village of Zionsville’s historic brick-street downtown

Zionsville Community Schools: Bradley Ridge is served by Pleasant View Elementary, Zionsville Middle School, and Zionsville Community High School, a district ranked #4 in Indiana. For corporate relocators with school-age children, this ranking matters. Zionsville Community Schools is a genuine differentiator, not a marketing line.

A note on the Holliday Farms adjacency: buyers sometimes ask whether being next to an established community helps or hurts. In this case, it helps significantly. Holliday Farms provides immediate neighborhood ambiance, including established streetscapes, active amenities, and comped values, that a brand-new community would take years to generate on its own. Phase 1 buyers at Bradley Ridge don’t stare at vacant lots on all sides. They look north at a mature, operational, highly liquid community.


What the Market Data Says

This is where I put the appraiser lens on.

The Q1 2026 RCPI Context

According to the Q1 2026 Indianapolis Luxury Market Replacement Cost Price Index (RCPI), a proprietary quarterly metric I publish tracking the relationship between new construction pricing and comparable resale values across three luxury tiers, the following premiums are currently embedded in the market:

  • $1M–$1.5M tier: New construction priced at a 15.4% premium over comparable resale (RCPI: 1.154)
  • $1.5M–$2.5M tier: Premium of 8.2% (RCPI: 1.082)
  • $2.5M+ tier: Premium of 13.7% (RCPI: 1.137), with a critical forward signal: the forward RCPI at this tier is 1.504, meaning builders are asking prices that would represent a 50.4% premium over comparable resale values

That forward signal at the $2.5M+ tier deserves a direct sentence: it is a significant gap between aspiration and demonstrated market value in this price range.

The $2.5M+ Demand Pause

In Q1 2026, not one new construction home priced above $2.5 million in the Greater Indianapolis tri-county market went under contract. Eleven active listings. Zero pending.

The single Bradley Ridge listing currently on MLS, 1715 Templewood Drive at $4,649,000 (8,226 square feet), sits in that tier. I’ll be direct: this is an aspirational price point for a community that has not yet established its comp base. The asking price reflects a vision of what Bradley Ridge will be when mature, not what it can be demonstrated to be today through closed sales data. That is not a criticism of the home or the builder. It is a timing observation, and an important one for any buyer considering that price range.

The Holliday Farms Proof

Here is why the timing observation is ultimately optimistic.

In the past year, Holliday Farms, Henke Development Group’s adjacent, mature community on the same corridor, recorded 17 new construction closings. The range: $1,170,000 to $4,604,820. Average sold price per square foot: $379, the highest average per-square-foot figure of any new construction community in the Greater Indianapolis luxury market. According to MIBOR BLC data, those are not aspirational numbers. Those are closed, recorded transactions.

Holliday Farms was once a Phase 1 community with aspirational pricing and no comp base. That is now what Henke communities become.

The Early Buyer Thesis

Bradley Ridge is approximately 2–3 years from having the established comp base that makes $4M+ pricing routine in this community. Phase 1 buyers are acquiring land and locking in builder pricing before that proof arrives. The risk is time: the community is not yet mature, and resale liquidity at the ultra-luxury tier is unproven here specifically. The potential reward is being on the right side of Henke’s demonstrated track record before the market fully prices it in.

The Honest Floor

Based on current Q1 2026 RCPI data and comparable sales analysis, $1.3M–$2.5M is the range where Bradley Ridge offers both strong value and a realistic near-term path to appreciation. The new construction premium at the entry tier (RCPI: 1.154) is meaningful but within historical norms for a Henke community in Phase 1. The ultra-luxury tier ($3.5M+) is a longer-horizon investment thesis that requires patience and confidence in the Henke development arc. Both theses can be correct simultaneously. They just require different buyer profiles and different timelines.


Who Is Bradley Ridge For?

Four buyer profiles make clear sense for Bradley Ridge, Zionsville as it stands in 2026.

1. The Corporate Relocator

An executive relocating to Indianapolis from a major metro such as Chicago, New York, Atlanta, or Dallas, who needs a gated, amenitized community with top-tier schools and a genuine sense of arrival. Bradley Ridge delivers on all four requirements. The school district is #4 in Indiana. The gated access and amenity stack communicate status without excess. The US-421 corridor puts the corporate north side within a straightforward commute. For the buyer who has lived in a Naperville or a Westport or a Lake Norman community and is evaluating what Indy can offer, Bradley Ridge answers the question.

2. The Nature-Forward Luxury Buyer

Someone who hikes, kayaks, fishes, and camps, who has been told, implicitly or explicitly, that living in a luxury home means giving those things up. Bradley Ridge is the rare community that says they don’t have to. Eagle Creek, the fishing pond, the nature preserve, the trail network, and the campground are not window dressing. They are central features of the land itself, built into the community’s governing documents. This buyer has usually been choosing between a luxury home and a nature-connected lifestyle. Bradley Ridge removes that choice.

3. The Land Investor

A buyer who understands Henke Development Group’s track record, who has watched Holliday Farms mature from Phase 1 to a $379/sqft average, and who wants 2-plus acres inside a community positioned to replicate that trajectory. The 5-acre estate lots in particular represent a compelling long-horizon land play inside a gated, managed, amenitized environment. Land appreciation in established Henke communities has been consistent. The Phase 1 window is the entry point.

4. The Holliday Farms Buyer Who Missed It

Holliday Farms has limited active inventory in the $1.5M–$2M range. The community is maturing and the entry tier is thinning. Bradley Ridge is the next chapter: on the same road, from the same developer, with the Holliday Farms proof of concept visible from the front gate. For buyers who looked at Holliday Farms three years ago and didn’t move, Bradley Ridge is the opportunity to not make that same calculation twice.


Working With an Advisor Who Knows This Land

If you’re seriously evaluating Bradley Ridge, the conversation you need is not with someone who will recite the amenity list and send you a lot map. It’s with an advisor who has read the RCPI data, walked the lots, understands the full arc of Henke’s development timeline, and will tell you, without hedging, both what is compelling about this community and where patience is required.

That is the combination I bring to this analysis. The CLHMS (Certified Luxury Home Marketing Specialist) designation reflects training and transaction volume specific to the luxury tier. The former Chubb Group high-value residential appraisal background means I evaluate properties the way an appraiser does: replacement cost, land premium, depreciation, comparable sales discipline, not the way a commission-motivated agent does. Those two things together produce a different kind of analysis than you typically get when evaluating a new construction luxury community.

Bradley Ridge, Zionsville is a compelling community with a remarkable history, a developer with a proven track record, and a Phase 1 window that won’t be open indefinitely. It also has an ultra-luxury tier that needs time to establish its comp base, and a market environment at $2.5M+ that requires clear eyes.

I can walk you through both sides of that conversation.

Contact Kris Bashenow, CLHMS
Email: [email protected]
Phone: 317-451-4213
Website: indyrealestateinsider.com

Read the Q1 2026 Indianapolis Luxury Market RCPI Report for the full market data picture.


Frequently Asked Questions

Where is Bradley Ridge located?

Bradley Ridge is located at 1310 US Highway 421 in Zionsville, Indiana 46077, in Boone County. The community sits on the US-421 corridor between Holliday Farms to the north and the Carpenter Nature Preserve to the south, approximately 30 minutes northwest of downtown Indianapolis and 15–20 minutes from Carmel’s Arts & Design District.

Who developed Bradley Ridge?

Bradley Ridge was developed by Henke Development Group, a Westfield, Indiana-based luxury real estate developer founded by Steve Henke. Henke Development Group is also responsible for Holliday Farms and Promontory of Zionsville in Zionsville, and Chatham Hills and Grand Park Village in Westfield. Henke Development Group purchased the Bradley Ridge property from the Bradley estate in 2020 and received Zionsville Town Council approval for the development in April 2024.

What are the home prices at Bradley Ridge in Zionsville?

Home prices at Bradley Ridge, Zionsville start at $1.3 million. The community includes a wide range of lot sizes, from 0.2 acres to over 5 acres, served by multiple builders across the custom and semi-custom spectrum. The current MLS listing at Bradley Ridge is a 5-bedroom, 8,226-square-foot home at 1715 Templewood Drive, listed at $4,649,000.

What amenities does Bradley Ridge have?

Bradley Ridge features a Napa Valley-inspired clubhouse, indoor and outdoor pools, pickleball courts, youth baseball and soccer fields, a modern fitness center, a golf simulator lounge, a Bar & Grill, a fishing pond with light watercraft access, a 30-acre nature preserve, over a mile of scenic hiking trails, and a community campground. Eagle Creek runs through the heart of the property for approximately one mile, providing a natural waterway feature throughout the community.

Does Bradley Ridge really have a campground?

Yes. Bradley Ridge includes a genuine community campground, with wooded sites and fire rings, as a permanent HOA amenity. The campground reflects the legacy of the original property owner, Charles Harvey “Buck” Bradley, a decorated Marine Corps dive bomber pilot, Eli Lilly General Counsel and Senior Vice President, and Yale Law graduate who used the land as a private retreat and valued its connection to the outdoors. It is, to the best of my research, a singular amenity in the American luxury residential community market.

What builders are building at Bradley Ridge?

Bradley Ridge, Zionsville has six approved builders: Foxlane Homes (production-custom hybrid), Bailey Weiler Design + Build (high-end custom architecture), Carrington Homes (established luxury builder), AR Homes by Arthur Rutenberg (franchise luxury with national design resources), Executive Homes (custom semi-custom), and G&G Custom Homes (full custom). The multi-builder structure means the community accommodates both entry-tier luxury and fully custom estate homes on the same street.

How does Bradley Ridge compare to Holliday Farms?

Bradley Ridge and Holliday Farms are adjacent communities on the US-421 corridor in Zionsville, both developed by Henke Development Group. Holliday Farms is the more mature community; it features Pete Dye-designed golf courses, an expansive clubhouse, and an established comp base that produced 17 new construction closings in the past year at an average of $379 per square foot. Bradley Ridge is the newer community, differentiated by its nature-first amenity stack: Eagle Creek, the campground, the nature preserve, and the fishing pond replace the golf course as the central amenity. For buyers who prioritize outdoor immersion over golf, Bradley Ridge, Zionsville is the more relevant product; for buyers who want an established community with an active golf component, Holliday Farms remains the benchmark.

Is Bradley Ridge a good investment?

Based on Q1 2026 RCPI data, Bradley Ridge represents a strong value proposition in the $1.3M–$2.5M range, where the new construction premium over comparable resale is within historical norms (RCPI: 1.154 at the entry tier, 1.082 at the mid tier). At $2.5M+, the forward RCPI signal of 1.504 and the absence of any new construction contracts above $2.5M in the Greater Indianapolis tri-county market in Q1 2026 indicate that the ultra-luxury tier requires a longer investment horizon. Phase 1 buyers are acquiring at the beginning of a Henke development arc that has consistently produced above-market appreciation. Holliday Farms’ $379/sqft average is the clearest evidence. But patience is required for the highest price points to be supported by closed comparables.


Sources: bradleyridge.com; Indianapolis Business Journal, “Rural Zionsville Residents Aim to Preserve Way of Life” (June 2024); Club + Resort Business, “Holliday Farms to Open Pete Dye-Designed Course This Summer” (March 2021); IBJ, “Henke Development Plans Expansive Clubhouse for Zionsville’s Holliday Farms Community” (September 2021); henkedevelopment.com; foxlanehomes.com; bailey-weiler.com; ggcustomhomes.com; arhomes.com; MIBOR BLC transaction data; Q1 2026 Indianapolis Luxury Market Replacement Cost Price Index (RCPI), The DeBoor Group / Real Broker.


Kris Bashenow, CLHMS, is a luxury real estate advisor at The DeBoor Group / Real Broker and a former high-value residential appraiser for Chubb Group. He publishes the quarterly Indianapolis Luxury Market Replacement Cost Price Index (RCPI) and specializes in new construction luxury communities along the US-421 corridor. He can be reached at [email protected], 317-451-4213, or at indyrealestateinsider.com.

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