Art house cinema, restaurant close to debut in Windsor Park

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An art house cinema and restaurant that have been in the works for more than two years are set to open early next year in the Windsor Park neighborhood.

The Kan-Kan Cinema and Brasserie will occupy a new, 14,500-square-foot building at 1258 Windsor St., a block east of the intersection of East Brookside and Commerce avenues.

About three-fourths of the two-story building will house four movie theaters. The largest of the four will have 146 seats. The smallest is a 12-seat screening room.

The rest of the space will be devoted to a European brasserie-style restaurant operated by Abbi Merriss, the chef and co-owner of the Fletcher Place restaurant Bluebeard. Patrons can visit Kan-Kan to eat at the restaurant, watch a movie or both.

Kan-Kan
About three-fourths of the two-story Kan-Kan Cinema and Brasserie will be dedicated to housing four movie theaters. (Photo by Daniel Jacobson, courtesy of Kan-Kan)

“We’re trying to create an environment for people to socialize and talk about film,” said Ed Battista, who developed the project along with his father, Tom, and business partner and film enthusiast Sam Sutphin.

The not-for-profit Indianapolis Film Project was created to own the building. Executive director for the organization is Louise Henderson, who was the festival director of the Heartland Film Festival in 2013 and has held numerous film- and festival-related positions since then. Local film-maker Daniel Arthur Jacobson will serve as the organization’s programming director.

The Kan-Kan will focus on first-run independent films and will screen movies seven days a week, Battista said, but it will also offer film-related educational programming. “Film education is a big part of our mission.”

For instance, the Kan-Kan plans to host film discussions and perhaps a series in which local film professors talk about a topic and show relevant examples from films.

Battista said the organization also plans to form a community advisory board whose members will provide input on programming.

“We’ve studied other models around the country, and the ones that really do this right connect with their communities,” Battista said.

Battista said the Kan-Kan is shooting for an opening in late February or early March.

The Battistas, local real estate developers who are known for repurposing old buildings, had originally intended to renovate the former Christian Unity Missionary Baptist Church for use as the Kan-Kan. But after discovering the church was in worse shape than expected, the team decided last year to tear down the church and start from scratch. Opting for new construction made the project much more expensive than the $1 million to $2 million the team originally projected in 2017.

Battista declined to reveal the total project cost, saying that it was more than $6 million but less than $10 million.

Oh, and about the Kan-Kan name: It comes from the Kurt Vonnegut novel “Cat’s Cradle.” Vonnegut coined the term to describe something that brings a person into a group whose members share a deep connection.

In other news this week:

— After a relocation-related closure, Jimmy John’s sandwich shop has reopened in its new spot at 135 N. Pennsylvania St., in the BMO Plaza building owned by Southfield, Michigan-based Redico.

The restaurant, owned by franchisee Scott Finner, moved last fall from its permanent space in the King Cole building at the corner of Meridian and Washington streets because the building is being transformed into a hotel.

— The Cuban sandwich shop Taste of Havana expects to reopen in mid-January at 8329 N. Michigan Road. The restaurant operated until November at 815 Broad Ripple Ave.

— A Marco’s Pizza at 7119 Whitestown Parkway in Zionsville opened in December. Franchisees are Davinder and Jasvir Khangura. Another location will have its grand opening Jan. 13 at 586 S. State Road 135 in Greenwood. The franchisee for that store is Jerry Bridges.

Founded in the Toledo suburb of Oregon, Ohio in 1978, Marco’s has more than 900 stores, including more than a dozen in the Indianapolis metro area.

— The Best Buy at 4625 Lafayette Road has closed. The 30,000-square-foot store is in the Centre West plaza near the intersection of Lafayette Road and Interstate 65. Best Buy has seven other Indianapolis-area stores in Indianapolis, Avon, Carmel, Greenwood and Noblesville.

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6 thoughts on “Art house cinema, restaurant close to debut in Windsor Park

    1. What is the point of your post? Whether it does or doesn’t, how does it affect you? Is your comment helpful in any way?

    2. What is the point of your response? Whether your agree or disagree, how does the post affect you? Is your response helpful in any way?

      For starters, their failure to adhere to the agreed upon commitments in order to get approval for this whole thing would have an adverse impact on the directly adjacent community; particularly if it isn’t successful. I could go on, but I see no reason to.

  1. It would have been helpful for you to have noted such concerns in your post. The casual reader, who might be interested in seeing such a cinema opening, would be unaware that there were controversial issues at play. As it stood, it just appeared to be a grumpy post by someone who doesn’t like someone else trying something new. And, yes, I realize that my own comment here comes off as a bit grumpy. I hope things somehow work out for both you and the cinema in the new year.

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