Story by Chris Beaudin / June 23, 2026

A new economic impact study out of Charleston County puts a number on something most people in this market already feel: the region is growing, and growing fast. Companies tied to Charleston County’s economic development efforts now generate an estimated $26 billion a year in economic activity and support nearly 80,000 jobs, according to research from a University of South Carolina economist reported by Live 5 News this week. That’s more than a quarter of all economic activity in the county.
Numbers like that tend to get read as a headline and then forgotten. We’d argue they’re worth sitting with a little longer, because behind every one of those jobs and every dollar of that activity is a building. Office space. Distribution and warehouse capacity. Manufacturing floors. Tenant improvements inside facilities that didn’t exist five years ago. None of that economic impact happens in the abstract. It happens inside square footage that someone had to plan, permit, and build.
Growth doesn’t show up as a press release. It shows up as a project.
When a company decides to expand in Charleston County, or relocate here, the story almost never starts with ribbon-cutting. It starts months earlier, with a site that has constraints nobody anticipated, a timeline that’s tighter than the budget wants to admit, or a build-out that has to work around an active operation that can’t afford downtime. The economic development wins get the headlines. The construction work that makes them real rarely does.
That gap is where we live. BEHKO Group exists for the projects that are complicated enough that other firms walk away from them, not because we enjoy difficulty for its own sake, but because the Lowcountry’s growth doesn’t generate simple projects. A region adding this much economic activity this quickly is, by definition, generating sites with tight footprints, accelerated timelines, and scopes that change as the client’s business changes. Someone has to be the firm that says yes to that and delivers anyway.
It’s not just the big employers.
One detail in the study is easy to miss but worth pulling out: a meaningful share of that economic impact, an estimated $3.3 billion and around 16,000 jobs, is generated by small businesses with fewer than 20 employees. The county councilman quoted in the piece put it simply: small businesses are the backbone of the local economy, even though they’re far less visible than the household-name manufacturers anchoring the region.
We’d add a footnote to that. Small businesses don’t expand in a vacuum either. A growing distributor needs more warehouse space. A regional service company outgrows its office. A specialty manufacturer adds a second line and needs the facility to support it. Every one of those moments is a construction decision, even if it never makes the news. That’s a large part of what we build for, work that supports the businesses doing the unglamorous, essential work of keeping the Lowcountry’s economy running.
The next chapter is regional.
The study’s own economist flagged what’s coming next: managing growth, particularly around infrastructure and cost, is now the central challenge for a county that’s succeeding. That challenge doesn’t stop at the Charleston County line. It’s part of why we’ve expanded our footprint to Savannah and continue to take on work across the broader Southeast. The same forces driving demand in Charleston, port activity, manufacturing investment, logistics expansion, are playing out along the entire Charleston-to-Savannah corridor. The firms that understand how to build in this region, on these sites, under these constraints, are going to be the ones the next wave of growth depends on.
That’s the work we’ve built BEHKO to do. Not the easy projects. The ones that actually move the region forward.
Read the full study coverage from Live 5 News here.