Arch-Con Corporation
Industry | Commercial construction |
---|---|
Founded | 2000[1] |
Headquarters | , |
Key people | Jason M. Cooper (President)[2] Geraldine Pacheco (CFO)[3] Michael Scheurich[4] |
Revenue | $0.5 Billion (2019)[4] |
Website | Official website |
Arch-Con Corporation is a commercial construction company based in Houston, Texas.[5][6][7][8] Founded in 2000, most of the company's activities are in the Southwestern United States.[9]
Overview
[edit]Arch-Con Corporation was founded in 2000 in Houston, Texas by Michael Scheurich.[10] Arch-Con began in the Houston area, working on commercial projects near metropolitan areas. Its first project was an entrance for Continental Manufacturing in Houston in 2000, following by a hotel project for Americas Best Value Inn in 2001.[4][11]
In 2009, the company relocated its main office to West Gray near River Oaks in Houston.[11] The company re-structured in 2010[11][4] and worked on medical facilities[which?] and the Whole Foods Market at Vintage Marketplace.[11]
In 2014, the company reached $100 million in revenue.[5][7] Starting from 2018, the company expanded its activity to a number of states including California, Colorado, Arizona and Oklahoma, among others.
In 2019, Arch-Con had $0.5 billion revenue in its annual report.
Due to the severe winter storm and 2021 Texas power crisis, a few of the Arch-Con’s job sites sustained significant damage but the company reported it did not experience any serious economic impact.[12]
Offices
[edit]Arch-Con Corporation recently completed construction on a new corporate headquarters in downtown Houston with satellite offices in Dallas (2015), Austin (2020) and Denver (2021).[13] It operates in Texas, Oklahoma, Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida and Louisiana.[11]
Philanthropy
[edit]Arch-Con has been involved with charity projects such as Houston-based The Center,[14] SEARCH Homeless Services Care Hub,[15] the American Heart Association and the Northwest Alliance Ministries Harrell Family Opportunity Center.[16] In 2021, the company received a Good Brick Award for restoring the Joseph A. Tennant House, a culturally significant landmark designed by the architect John F. Staub in the Broadacres Historic District.[17][18]
Projects
[edit]- The Mill. (334,218-square-foot)[19]
- Braunfels Commerce Center, San Antonio (651,010-square-foot)[20]
- Quantum 56, North Central Denver (868,360-square-foot)[21]
- Remy On The Trails (200,000-square-foot)[22]
- Southlink Logistics Center (1,000,000-square-foot)[23][24]
- Home Depot Distribution Center (657,000-square-foot; under construction)[25]
- Regent Square project (600-unit apartment complex)[8]
- Buffalo Heights District Project (742,000-square-foot)[26]
- Park 20 Distribution Center (468,000-square-foot)[6]
- Village Towers(120,000-square-foot)[27]
- Prologis Park Trinity Boulevard (156,000-square-foot)[28]
- 1.5M-SF distribution center near Baytown (under construction)[29]
- Houston Physicians’ Hospital[30]
- Medical Center of Tomball[31][32]
- Palace Bowling Lanes (88,000-square-foot)[33]
References
[edit]- ^ "Arch-Con Corporation". Inc.
- ^ "New Arch-Con president talks hiring, expanding throughout Texas". Houston Business Journal.
- ^ "CFO of the Year: Small Private Company". Houston Business Journal.
- ^ a b c d "Arch-Con Corp. has seen significant growth across two decades, a trend its CEO hopes to continue". Houston Business Journal.
- ^ a b "10 Businesses That Are Heating Up Houston". Inc. 21 December 2015.
- ^ a b "Houston contractor expanding to North Texas with major project near I-20". The Dallas Morning News. 29 March 2016.
- ^ a b Brown, Eliot (10 February 2015). "Falling Oil Prices Threaten Houston Building Boom". The Wall Street Journal.
- ^ a b "GID's 600-unit apartment complex breaks ground just off Allen Parkway". The Houston Chronicle. 4 November 2019.
- ^ "2020 Largest Houston-area general contractors". Houston Business Journal.
- ^ "Board of Directors - Michael Scheurich". Houston Organization.
- ^ a b c d e "The history of the Arch-Con company". Arch-Con.
- ^ "Houston commercial contractors grapple with fallout from devastating winter storm". Houston Business Journal.
- ^ "General contractor Arch-Con expands into Austin with West Campus project already on tap". Austin Business Journal.
- ^ "Arch-Con, Midway & Gensler Come Together To Help Raise Millions For Charity". BISNOW.
- ^ "Commercial Real Estate Community Celebrates Grand Opening Of SEARCH Homeless Care Hub". BISNOW.
- ^ "Arch-Con Completes Construction of 32,000 SF Community Center in Houston". Re-business online. 10 July 2017.
- ^ "Honoring Preservation in a City That Mostly Looks to the Future — Houston's Good Brick Award Winners Revealed". Paper City. 12 November 2020.
- ^ "Preservation Houston announces 2021 Good Brick Awards". Houston Chronicle. 15 April 2021.
- ^ "Triten and Arch-Con Top-Out Project". Realty News Report. 6 September 2023.
- ^ "Construction Starts on Four-Building Industrial Park in Northeast San Antonio". Costar.
- ^ "Hines Building 868K SF Denver Business Park". Connect CRE.
- ^ Sams, Brandon (12 July 2023). "McNair Interests Expands its Westchase Multifamily Development". The Real Deal.
- ^ "A New Era for Industrial Design". Rebusiness Online. 3 July 2018.
- ^ "New York investor buys huge southern Dallas Amazon shipping hub". The Dallas Morning News. 4 December 2020.
- ^ "Home Depot Expands Industrial Footprint in Northwest Houston". National Property Holdings.
- ^ "First phase of the Buffalo Heights District (TM) Tops Out". Arch-Con. 16 October 2018.
- ^ "Covid-19 gives Houston's Moody National, Arch-Con a crash course in quick construction". HBJ - Crane Watch.
- ^ "A Year in Review with Arch-Con Construction". Arch-Con. 8 June 2017.
- ^ "Floor and Decor to build 1.5M-SF distribution center near Baytown". Houston Business Journal.
- ^ "Hospital Expanding in NASA/Webster Area". RealtyNewsReport. October 2020.
- ^ "Construction underway on Medical Center of Tomball". HBJ.
- ^ "BSG developing new medical office building in Tomball, TX". REJournals. 9 February 2021.
- ^ "Palace Bowling Lanes to be revived as Southside Commons mixed-use development". The Houston Chronicle. 10 September 2018.