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Indiana University Informatics & Communications Technology Complex

Buildings and structures completed in 2004Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis
Informatics & Communications Technology Complex, 2023
Informatics & Communications Technology Complex, 2023

The Informatics & Communications Technology Complex is located on the east side of the IUPUI campus at one of its key locations acting as a gateway to the campus. The 207,000 square foot building is home to the IU Luddy School of Informatics, Computing and Engineering for the Indianapolis campus. The building was designed to match the aesthetic of the Lawrence W. Inlow Hall, Gateway Garage, and the Shreve Gateway to form a highly visible entrance to the university. The building located next to Innovation Hall and the Sigma Theta Tau Headquarters.

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Indiana University Informatics & Communications Technology Complex
West Michigan Street, Indianapolis

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N 39.773942777778 ° E -86.167788888889 °
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School of Informatics & Communications Technology Complex

West Michigan Street 535
46202 Indianapolis
Indiana, United States
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Informatics & Communications Technology Complex, 2023
Informatics & Communications Technology Complex, 2023
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Kurt Vonnegut Museum and Library
Kurt Vonnegut Museum and Library

The Kurt Vonnegut Museum and Library is dedicated to championing the literary, artistic, and cultural contributions of the late writer, artist, and Indianapolis native Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. It opened in January 2011 and was located in The Emelie, a structure on the National Register of Historic Places at 340 North Senate Avenue in Indianapolis, Indiana, until January 2019. Funding for a new building at 543 Indiana Avenue was secured, and the library reopened to the public on November 9, 2019. The library serves as a cultural and educational resource facility, museum, art gallery, and reading room. It supports language and visual arts education through programs and outreach activities with other local arts organizations to foster a strong arts network for both the local and national communities. One of the goals of the Kurt Vonnegut Museum and Library is to help bring tourism to Indianapolis. Tourism officials from the city look at the library as an important attraction and reason for people to visit. The library is one of several efforts supported by the city and institutions such as the Lilly Endowment and Ball State University to expand the city's cultural activities, alongside the Indianapolis Museum of Art and The Children's Museum of Indianapolis.Ball State University along with partner contributors granted the library $76,710 to digitize rare archival material and make the content more accessible to the general public via a digital display.On September 26, 2021, AP News reported that the Kurt Vonnegut Museum and Library in Indianapolis has been designated a Literary Landmark by the Literary Landmarks Association.

Bethel A.M.E. Church (Indianapolis, Indiana)
Bethel A.M.E. Church (Indianapolis, Indiana)

The Bethel A.M.E. Church, known in its early years as Indianapolis Station or the Vermont Street Church, is a historic African Methodist Episcopal Church in Indianapolis, Indiana. Organized in 1836, it is the city's oldest African-American congregation. The three-story church on West Vermont Street dates to 1869 and was added to the National Register in 1991. The surrounding neighborhood, once the heart of downtown Indianapolis's African American community, significantly changed with post-World War II urban development that included new hotels, apartments, office space, museums, and the Indiana University–Purdue University at Indianapolis campus. In 2016 the congregation sold their deteriorating church, which will be used in a future commercial development. The congregation built a new worship center at 6417 Zionsville Road in Pike Township, Marion County, Indiana. The Bethel AME congregation has a long history of supporting the city's African American community. It is especially noted for its activities on behalf of the antislavery movement in the years before the American Civil War; its support of the Underground Railroad, which provided protection to slaves en route to Canada; and its commitment to education and community outreach. Bethel also served as the mother church to several AME congregations in Indiana and as a public meeting place in Indianapolis for social activists. Local chapters of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the Indiana State Federation of Colored Women's Clubs were organized at the Vermont Street church in the early 1900s.