Service Area
Commercial and industrial construction across Midland and the Permian Basin.
Browse the cities and submarkets where we support commercial, industrial, civil, and owner-user construction with preconstruction, site coordination, shell delivery, and final handoff planning.
Market Coverage
Nearby locations and operating areas.
Our reach includes core Midland neighborhoods, the Odessa market, and the surrounding cities, service corridors, and industrial areas owners depend on for regional growth.
Midland
General Contractors of Midland serves commercial and industrial owners building across the Tall City — from Polo Park executive corridors and the Loop 250 growth spine to North Midland medical districts and the oilfield-services yards that keep the Permian running. We coordinate every trade under one contract, from caliche subgrade prep through shell delivery and final occupancy, so owners spend their time on operations rather than contractor management.
Downtown Midland
General Contractors of Midland handles infill, repositioning, and tenant-improvement work in Downtown Midland — the historic core of the Permian Basin's corporate capital — where construction logistics, active-building phasing, and high-visibility finishes demand a general contractor with genuine urban-site experience.
North Midland
General Contractors of Midland serves the North Midland medical district, professional office corridor, and neighborhood commercial submarket — one of the Permian Basin's most active zones for owner-user office, clinic, and retail construction driven by the wealth and population growth attached to energy-sector employment.
South Midland
General Contractors of Midland serves the South Midland industrial and service corridor — the working backbone of the Permian Basin's oilfield supply chain — where owner-user facilities, fleet shops, pipe yards, and service company headquarters demand heavy-use site design, practical shell construction, and phased turnover timed to operations startup rather than cosmetic completion.
Greenwood
General Contractors of Midland serves unincorporated Greenwood in Midland County — a fast-growing premium residential and commercial corridor east of Midland proper where energy-sector wealth funds custom homes, quality commercial development, and owner-user projects that reflect the higher standards of the surrounding residential community.
Gardendale
General Contractors of Midland serves unincorporated Gardendale — the industrial and logistics corridor between Midland and Odessa along Highway 191 — where oilfield service companies, trucking firms, and equipment businesses build owner-user facilities that need wide-site civil engineering, heavy concrete, and utility infrastructure coordinated before vertical construction starts.
Odessa
General Contractors of Midland serves the Odessa market — Midland's Permian Basin sister city and the blue-collar industrial counterpart to Midland's corporate capital — where warehouse construction, oilfield service facilities, logistics yards, and commercial owner-user buildings drive consistent construction demand tied directly to basin-wide drilling and completion activity.
West Odessa
General Contractors of Midland serves the West Odessa industrial and field-service corridor — where oilfield trucking companies, equipment rental businesses, and Permian Basin service operations build owner-user facilities on large parcels that demand heavy-use concrete, functional yard design, and coordinated site and building delivery.
East Odessa
General Contractors of Midland serves East Odessa — the Permian Basin logistics gateway along I-20 east of the Odessa city core — where freight-oriented warehouse construction, logistics yard development, and oilfield support facilities serve regional supply chains connecting the basin to Dallas, San Antonio, and Houston.
Andrews
General Contractors of Midland serves Andrews County — a premium oil-patch market northwest of Midland in the heart of the Northwest Shelf play — where energy-sector wealth supports above-average construction standards for owner-user industrial facilities, commercial buildings, and fleet shops that serve both the local economy and the broader Permian Basin operations network.
Stanton
General Contractors of Midland serves Stanton and Martin County — the rural agricultural and oil-production satellite east of Midland along I-20 — where the county seat's position between Midland and Big Spring makes it a practical location for logistics support buildings, owner-user industrial facilities, and agricultural service construction serving the Martin County economy.
Big Spring
General Contractors of Midland serves Big Spring and Howard County — the Howard County seat and a West Texas crossroads city where I-20 freight movement, Permian Basin satellite activity, Big Spring State Hospital, and the VA Texas Western Coastal Health Care System generate a commercial and industrial construction market that is more diverse than its population size suggests.
Crane
General Contractors of Midland serves Crane County — a compact but economically productive Permian Basin oil county south of Odessa — where Yates and Spraberry formation production has sustained a small community with consistently above-average oil-patch wealth, generating owner-user industrial construction, community commercial projects, and institutional building programs that benefit from Midland general contractor capability deployed to a rural satellite market.
Monahans
General Contractors of Midland serves Monahans and Ward County — a Permian Basin west-flank community on I-20 where oilfield production, potash mining heritage, and freight corridor logistics combine to generate consistent owner-user industrial construction demand for warehouse facilities, logistics yards, and oilfield service company buildings.
Seminole
General Contractors of Midland serves Seminole and Gaines County — a productive combination of Permian Basin oil production and dryland cotton agriculture where owner-user industrial facilities, agricultural processing support buildings, and community commercial projects reflect a rural economy with consistent investment capacity tied to both commodity sectors.
Lamesa
General Contractors of Midland serves Lamesa and Dawson County — the Dawson County seat in the heart of the South Plains cotton belt — where agricultural processing facilities, owner-user commercial buildings, community institutional projects, and the occasional Permian Basin-adjacent industrial development create a steady construction market that rewards practical preconstruction and dependable field execution.
Kermit
General Contractors of Midland serves Kermit and Winkler County — an active Permian Basin oil county in far-west Texas where steady production from the Winkler and Delaware Basin formations sustains oilfield service company construction, owner-user industrial facilities, and community commercial projects in a small-town environment that rewards straightforward execution and direct owner communication.
Wink
General Contractors of Midland serves Wink in Winkler County — a small but active Permian Basin oilfield community where owner-user industrial facilities, storage compounds, and field-support buildings need practical, durable construction management delivered without the overhead and process complexity that smaller communities cannot justify.
Pecos
General Contractors of Midland serves Pecos and Reeves County — a growing I-20 and I-10 crossroads city where Permian Basin oil boom capital, long-haul freight logistics, and Reeves County's significant Delaware Basin production combine to generate truck terminal construction, warehouse facilities, oilfield service company buildings, and owner-user commercial development at a pace that exceeds what the city's population size would ordinarily predict.
Fort Stockton
General Contractors of Midland serves Fort Stockton and Pecos County — the regional hub of far-west Texas at the I-10 and US-285 crossroads — where long-haul freight logistics, Permian Basin production service, and the city's role as a trade center for a large and sparsely populated West Texas region generate consistent commercial and industrial construction demand for owners investing in durable facilities at a genuine regional gateway.
McCamey
General Contractors of Midland serves McCamey and Upton County — a compact but productive oil county between Midland and Fort Stockton where Upton County production and wind energy development combine to generate oilfield service company facilities, support compounds, and owner-user industrial construction on a scale appropriate to a rural community with real investment capacity.
Rankin
General Contractors of Midland serves Rankin and Upton County — the smaller of Upton County's two communities, positioned in productive oilfield country southeast of McCamey — where field-service company support buildings, equipment storage compounds, and ranch-country owner-user facilities need honest, practical construction management at the right scale for a small rural market.
Big Lake
General Contractors of Midland serves Big Lake and Reagan County — a productive Permian Basin oil county southeast of Midland where consistent Reagan County production from the Big Lake and Spraberry fields sustains oilfield service company facility demand, community commercial investment, and the occasional institutional project in one of the genuinely oil-wealthy small counties of the West Texas basin.
Snyder
General Contractors of Midland serves Snyder and Scurry County — the Scurry County seat northeast of Midland where one of Texas's most productive oil fields, the Spraberry/Wolfcamp play on the Scurry County side, combined with a community-sized commercial and institutional base generates consistent construction demand for warehouse facilities, commercial modernization, owner-user industrial buildings, and Scurry County civic projects.
Colorado City
General Contractors of Midland serves Colorado City and Mitchell County — the I-20 community between Midland and Abilene where energy-sector activity, wind farm infrastructure, and the town's role as a Mitchell County trade center combine to generate commercial building, warehouse, and owner-user industrial construction demand for owners building along one of West Texas's busiest freight corridors.
Sweetwater
General Contractors of Midland serves Sweetwater and Nolan County — a regional West Texas hub where the world's largest wind energy concentration, an active air combat training economy from Dyess Air Force Base proximity, and a traditional ranching and commerce base combine to create commercial and industrial construction demand that draws on multiple economic sectors rather than a single commodity cycle.
Ackerly
General Contractors of Midland serves the Ackerly area in Dawson and Martin counties — a small agricultural and oilfield community on the US-87 corridor between Midland and Lamesa where cotton farming, oil production, and the occasional county road logistics business create small-scale owner-user construction demand that benefits from the same disciplined preconstruction and field management we bring to every project regardless of size.
Tarzan
General Contractors of Midland serves the Tarzan area in Martin County — a small rural community northeast of Midland in cotton-farming and oil-patch country where agricultural storage, oilfield support facilities, and ranch improvements represent the construction market for an area where the right-sized approach matters more than big-project management theater.
Imperial
General Contractors of Midland serves Imperial and Pecos County — a small Pecos County community south of Odessa on US-285 where Permian Basin oil production and the regional road corridor connecting Odessa to Fort Stockton and the Big Bend country create steady demand for oilfield service company facilities, logistics support buildings, and owner-user construction in a rural setting that rewards practical delivery over process complexity.
Iraan
General Contractors of Midland serves Iraan and Pecos County — a small oil-rich Pecos County community on the Pecos River where sustained production from the Yates and Queen City fields has generated a community investment capacity that outpaces the town's population, supporting owner-user oilfield service facilities, community commercial buildings, and the institutional improvements that a productive Pecos County community can afford.
Coyanosa
General Contractors of Midland serves Coyanosa in Pecos County — a small oilfield and agricultural community west of Pecos on I-20 where Pecos County production activity and I-20 logistics positioning create demand for owner-user oilfield support facilities, outdoor storage compounds, and logistics-adjacent buildings that need practical site design and honest turnover rather than unnecessary project management overhead.
Penwell
General Contractors of Midland serves Penwell in unincorporated Ector County — a small community between Odessa and Kermit on I-20 west of Odessa where the confluence of I-20 freight corridor access, Permian Basin oilfield production activity, and the Odessa-Andrews industrial corridor creates demand for logistics yards, oilfield service company facilities, and owner-user industrial buildings at the edge of the Odessa metro.
Goldsmith
General Contractors of Midland serves Goldsmith in Ector County — a small oilfield community between Odessa and Andrews where Permian Basin production operations create steady demand for owner-user industrial facilities, support yards, and service buildings that need practical construction without big-city overhead or drawn-out project management.
Notrees
General Contractors of Midland serves Notrees in Ector County — a tiny oilfield community west of Odessa on Highway 302 and FM roads where active Permian Basin production in the surrounding area creates demand for small owner-user oilfield service facilities, equipment storage compounds, and support buildings that need practical delivery without the overhead of projects that belong in urban Odessa.
Pyote
General Contractors of Midland serves Pyote in Ward County — a small I-20 community between Monahans and Pecos where the interstate's historic role as a route for Permian Basin production equipment and regional freight movement continues to create demand for outdoor storage compounds, logistics support facilities, and owner-user oilfield buildings that need to handle I-20 traffic volumes and heavy equipment loads from day one of operations.