The Haskell Company
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| The Haskell Company | |
|---|---|
| Type | Private |
| Founded | 1965 |
| Headquarters | Jacksonville, Florida, USA |
| Key people | Preston H. Haskell III, Chairman Steven T. (Steve) Halverson, President & CEO Edward W. (Ted) Mullinix EVP & CFO |
| Industry | Construction |
| Products | Design-Build, Program/Facility/Construction Management, Project Planning, Development |
| Revenue | $750 million (2006) |
| Website | www.thehaskellco.com |
'The Haskell Company is a privately held corporation headquartered in Jacksonville, Florida, United States. The employee-owned company was founded in 1965 by Preston H. Haskell III and their work spans North America, Latin America and the Caribbean. The company is Florida's largest privately held construction company and ranks among the top design/build firms in the US [1]. Projects range from a Krispy Kreme Doughnuts factory to a federal medium-security prison. Landmark projects have included the Daytona International Speedway, Jacksonville Municipal Stadium (home of the NFL Jaguars), the American Transtech building (now Convergys), Baptist Hospital South, and the St. Joe building (all in Jacksonville). It was an early leader in public sector design-build delivery and has designed and built 43 public schools in Florida and other states. They perform Design/build, Construction management, Facility management, Interior design, Steel fabrication, infrastructure & real estate services for commercial, industrial & institutional facilities.
Industry segments include:
|
Aviation |
Government |
Parking |
The Engineering News-Record magazine ranked Haskell as No. 14 in its Top 50 Green Contractors for 2007 (US) list and 20th in its Top 100 Design/Build firms in the US (2007). Florida Trend Magazine ranked Haskell as the 39th largest privately held company in Florida for 2007. [2] The company has won scores of awards for their projects. Company founder Preston Haskell was honored with the Brunelleschi Lifetime Achievement Award in 2002 from the Design-Build Institute of America.

