Who We Are
Mario Aguilar
Milestones

Levey begins construction of Levey Logistics Park, a 2 building, 661,680 square foot development with direct access to the South Sam Houston Tollway via the newly dedicated and constructed city right of way, "Levey Lane".
Levey acquires 38 acres along the South Sam Houston Tollway to develop Levey Logistics Park, a 661,680 Class-A industrial business park, bringing the company's currently planned and prior developments along Houston's Beltway 8 freeway to over 2 million square feet.
The company celebrates its 40-year anniversary and completes construction of its 545,574 square foot, 5-building development, The Business Center at 5-Corners.
Levey launches The Business Center at 5 Corners, a five building, 550,000 sf development situated on 43 acres, with over 1/2 mile of frontage along the South Sam Houston Tollway.
Levey expands its track-record of opportunistic acquisitions following the purchase of the 67 acres at the southeast corner of Beltway 8 and South Lake Houston Parkway.
Levey sells Sam Houston Business Park to institutional buyer over $35,000,000, achieving the second highest per sf price in the greater metro area.
Levey completes development and leasing of Sam Houston Business Park, a 286,000 square foot development on the west Sam Houston Tollway.
Levey acquires 43 acres along the South Sam Houston tollway. This project
The company celebrates its 30-year anniversary.
The company begins working on several land assemblages, including Levey's first business park, Northwest Place I, a Levey portfolio holding.
The company introduces the Levey Group moniker (as a d/b/a for GSL) before reentering the ground-up industrial development business.
The company expands its value-add program, increasing the clear height of over 500,000 square feet of warehouse space, and converting numerous functionally obsolete buildings into income producing assets. Notably the company purchased the former Reed Roller Bit plant consisting of 14 buildings totalling 550,000 sf on 34 acres in near east Houston. The company subdivided the land (selling 10-acres on the frontage road to Centerpoint Energy) then redeveloped, leased, and sold the remaining property.
The company hires David Ebro, Gus's grandson. Together, they invest in value-add real estate opportunities and funding high-yielding opportunistic CRE loans.
GSL sells a substantial part of its real estate portfolio, the development company, and begins offering commercial real estate bridge, acquisition, and construction financing.
Gustave (Gus) Levey incorporates GSL investments and begins developing single-tenants industrial warehouses. Gus developed over 100 facilities throughout the Gulf-Coast region between 1982-1998.

