About
Sir Edmund Hillary said that people do not decide to become extraordinary. They decide to accomplish extraordinary things. Harvey Cleary works for those kinds of people. We hire those kinds of people. And we create spaces for those kinds of people.
VALUE PROPOSITION
There is a value proposition in every project. The Harvey Cleary differentiator is our ability to crystalize that unique value. Dollars are one standard measure, but rarely is it the primary end goal. Be it a 10,000 SF community center or a 1,000,000 SF corporate campus, every project has significant relevance for the client behind it. Our clients have come to rely on us for our ability to assess a project holistically and clearly outline the big picture – what the project needs to achieve in quantitative and qualitative terms.
the big picture
We own the project’s big picture and assume the responsibility for making it happen. Harvey Cleary is unique among commercial contractors in that we assign one team to a project from start to finish. There are no separate departments. The same individuals who provide preconstruction services see the project through to completion. Our clients know exactly where accountability resides at every step along the way. On our end, this provides ownership for our teams – one client, one project and one expected outcome.
our people
This single-team accountability also fuels our staff’s passion for making our client’s visions come to life. Our people are problem solvers, constantly looking for ways to improve how we build, use new products, and deliver on the value promise. Many builders talk about innovation as merely the application of the newest technology. Yes, we keep up with technology, but at Harvey Cleary, innovation is the constant pursuit of ways to improve our overall process.
MAKE IT RIGHT
There is a ‘war story’ behind every project ever built. Regardless of the specific issue or who was at fault, the question is, ‘Did the contractor make it right?’ Harvey Cleary will always make it right. Our business is to build great projects. We’re more concerned about building lasting relationships. These relationships are the true greatness we’re building because we believe construction is a People business. The people we work for and the people who use the spaces we create are the center of everything we do.
top rankings
Since our founding in 1957, Harvey Cleary has built a national reputation as an industry innovator—having constructed thousands of one-of-a-kind projects for clients across the country.
$2 B
Construction Volume
#1
2023 General Contractor
ENR TX & LA
100 +
Business Rankings
84 %
Repeat Client Business
5 +
Offices Nationwide
OUR HISTORY
Concrete. Such a humble material yet incredibly strong and resilient.
It’s an apt metaphor for Harvey Cleary.

The 2000s
Over the past 20 years alone, clients have come to us for projects we never could have envisioned during those early days of doing tiltwall warehouses. Projects like the ExxonMobil campus, the Baylor Alkek Tower, Hotel Emma at The Pearl, and Market Square Tower have been so fulfilling to bring to fruition for their sheer size and complexity. Other projects like Lawndale Art Center, Austin Ballet, Congregation Beth Israel, and the Teach for America office renovation have been rewarding for the opportunity to directly impact our community.

The Next Generation
Over the history of the firm, we’ve certainly had plenty of lessons learned the hard way. Like our beloved concrete, we are resilient and strong in compression. And we try to remain true to our composition, the qualities upon which David E. Harvey, Sr. and Gerald D. Hines founded the firm – integrity above all, quality in all decisions, and constant improvement through innovation.

1957
Young, entrepreneurial engineers David E. Harvey, Sr. and Gerald D. Hines started Harvey Construction Company in 1957. Their early projects, utilitarian and unassuming warehouses, set the company on a course to build some of the most pivotal buildings in existence today.

The 60s
D.E. Harvey, Sr. was already a big proponent of tiltwall construction upon launching the company. Using this delivery technique extensively, he stretched its limits to build bigger and faster. The Harvey crews quickly came to favor concrete as the building material of choice. The tiltwall warehouses led to small office buildings that Mr. Hines wanted to pursue. Some were tiltwall and some not, yet they were all increasing complex.

The 70s
Successive projects continued to push Harvey to perfect their craft at a time when young new architectural firms were pushing design boundaries. Mr. Hines introduced Mr. Harvey to Gyo Obata when his firm Hellmuth Obata Kassebaum started designing projects in Houston, such as the Neiman-Marcus Galleria. Harvey would go on to build that store, along with the rest of the first phase of the Houston Galleria in 1969. In 1975, Harvey completed the 500,000 SF Post Oak Central I building, designed by Philip Johnson.

Going & Growing
Throughout the 1960s and ‘70s, Harvey continued to innovate the application of poured concrete. With a constant engineering mindset of problem-solving, the firm developed new pouring methods with lighter forms. The efficiency led to the ability to complete one floor per week in high rise construction. Harvey completed the 30-story Austin National Bank in 1973, the tallest building in downtown Austin at the time. Fast forward to 1982 when Harvey completed 14 high rises in one year.

The 80s
David Harvey, Jr. and Joseph Cleary both earned engineering degrees and both started their careers at Harvey, in 1977 and 1976 respectively. And both took over ownership of Harvey Builders in 1987, renaming the firm to Harvey Cleary. Coming off the recession of the early 80s and the downturn in oil pricing of the mid-80s, the new Harvey saw opportunity in the shifting economic landscape.

The 90s
Harvey started an Interiors group in the 90s to focus on reviving older offices and completing code compliance updates. This pragmatic work allowed Harvey’s problem-solving skills to shine again; the firm worked closely with developers and owners during preconstruction to generate project pricing and operational costs. Having this information earlier in the design process allowed clients to make more informed choices in line with the building proforma. It’s a part of our process to this day, and one way clients say we provide added value.

The 2000s
Over the past 20 years alone, clients have come to us for projects we never could have envisioned during those early days of doing tiltwall warehouses. Projects like the ExxonMobil campus, the Baylor Alkek Tower, Hotel Emma at The Pearl, and Market Square Tower have been so fulfilling to bring to fruition for their sheer size and complexity. Other projects like Lawndale Art Center, Austin Ballet, Congregation Beth Israel, and the Teach for America office renovation have been rewarding for the opportunity to directly impact our community.

The Next Generation
Over the history of the firm, we’ve certainly had plenty of lessons learned the hard way. Like our beloved concrete, we are resilient and strong in compression. And we try to remain true to our composition, the qualities upon which David E. Harvey, Sr. and Gerald D. Hines founded the firm – integrity above all, quality in all decisions, and constant improvement through innovation.

1957
Young, entrepreneurial engineers David E. Harvey, Sr. and Gerald D. Hines started Harvey Construction Company in 1957. Their early projects, utilitarian and unassuming warehouses, set the company on a course to build some of the most pivotal buildings in existence today.

The 60s
D.E. Harvey, Sr. was already a big proponent of tiltwall construction upon launching the company. Using this delivery technique extensively, he stretched its limits to build bigger and faster. The Harvey crews quickly came to favor concrete as the building material of choice. The tiltwall warehouses led to small office buildings that Mr. Hines wanted to pursue. Some were tiltwall and some not, yet they were all increasing complex.
LOCATIONS & Building
Each Harvey Cleary office shares a common set of values. Our rigorous quality standards are universal regardless of location. This has allowed us to build amazing spaces across the country. Explore where we’ve built and where we call home.
OUR Subcontractors
Harvey Cleary works in diverse markets that are best served by diverse suppliers and subcontractors. We believe that the inclusion of diverse suppliers and contractors promotes innovation, competitiveness and strengthens the communities in which we operate. We build a diverse range of project types and actively work to align and diversify our business relationships with subcontractors and suppliers.
Talk to our experts
With more than six decades under our belts, we know how to deliver your vision.