
Terrex Development & Construction has quietly pulled off a major upgrade, shifting its headquarters from Oakley to a much larger facility in Golf Manor and expanding the company’s footprint to more than three times its former size. The move brings Terrex’s construction operations and office teams under one roof, creating dedicated room for equipment, preconstruction staff and design services that company leaders say will help the firm keep pace with a growing slate of projects across Cincinnati.
The relocation and a first look at the new space were detailed by the Cincinnati Business Courier, which reported that the firm moved from Oakley into the Wiehe Road property in Golf Manor. That coverage highlighted the expanded room for staging and field operations the new site offers, giving Terrex far more breathing room than its previous neighborhood setting.
In a LinkedIn post, Terrex wrote, “We’re still settling in, but we’re already enjoying nearly triple the space and the ability to house our construction operations under one roof,” and the company’s contact page now lists the Wiehe Road address. Terrex's LinkedIn post and the firm’s website both show the updated location.
Terrex's local footprint
Terrex has been visible on several sizable Cincinnati efforts in recent years, from work tied to the Uptown Innovation Corridor to the Emery Theater restoration. WCPO has reported on the firm's role in the Innovation Corridor, and city planning materials show Terrex engaged as the design-build partner on the Emery project. The Cincinnati Zoo also lists Terrex among partners and sponsors connected to capital work on the grounds, including early involvement with the Mexican Wolf habitat.
Why the move matters
Setting up on Wiehe Road places Terrex in an industrially oriented stretch north of the city where staging, storage and fabrication are easier to pull off than in denser neighborhoods like Oakley. Commercial property listings identify 6222 Wiehe Road as part of the Golf Manor market, and city business records list Terrex entities at that address. Those practical benefits, plus extra room for shop space, are often why contractors and developers trade urban storefront offices for larger, more flexible facilities on the periphery.
Terrex said it plans an open house for neighbors and clients as staff settle in, and the relocation further positions the company to take on larger, simultaneous projects across Greater Cincinnati. Observers say the added capacity will matter as work continues at the University of Cincinnati, the zoo and downtown cultural projects.









