OUR HISTORY
A History Written in the Work
SiteWORX was founded on June 10, 2010—right in the middle of an industry downturn, when most companies were scaling back instead of stepping forward. Matt, Joe, and Matt’s father, Mike Smith, launched with a five‑man crew, a single mini excavator, and an unwavering belief that hard work and integrity would carry them through any market. From day one, failure wasn’t an option and no job was too big or too small. But neither was cutting corners. The team focused on delivering solid, timely work that spoke for itself—showing up, solving problems, and earning trust one project at a time. As industry relationships resurfaced, so did opportunity: larger sites, tougher challenges, and a growing reputation for doing the work others couldn’t. Today, the equipment is newer and the projects are bigger, but the mindset remains unchanged. SiteWORX is still built on grit, accountability, and a commitment to doing things right—the first time.


OVER THE YEARS
More than a decade of projects, partnerships, and progress
2010
8 employees
SiteWORX begins. Matt, Joe, and Matt’s father, Mike Smith, launched with a five‑man crew, a single mini excavator and a no-quit attitude.
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2012
29 employees
First residential neighborhood, Regency Park.
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2013
34 employees
First residential apartment complex, Mason Grand Apartments. The team expands capabilities, adding specialized equipment and growing the crew.
2014
68 employees
Through an acquisition, SiteWORX offers commercial curb and concrete. The purchase of our first stringless curb machine led the way in technology investment year after year.
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2016
117 employees
Ambleside, the largest residential to date, with 107 lots.
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2018
119 employees
Festo, largest commercial project to date.
2020
138 employees
SiteWORX opens new HQ in Lebanon, Ohio.
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2025
185 employees
Venue East, publicly known as The Farmer Music Center. Located on the former Coney Island site, next to Riverbend Music Center in Cincinnati, OH.
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Today
200+ employees
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SiteWORX manages multimillion-dollar projects with 180+ total pieces of heavy equipment. The tools are newer, the jobs are bigger—but the mindset hasn't changed.

