
Zacua Ventures
Investing in the next generation of built environment entrepreneurs.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at Zacua Ventures.

Investing in the next generation of built environment entrepreneurs.
Key people at Zacua Ventures.
Key people at Zacua Ventures.
Zacua Ventures is a global early-stage venture capital fund established in 2022 that focuses on investing in entrepreneurs transforming the built environment.[1][2] The firm's mission centers on "adapting the built world for future generations" by backing visionary entrepreneurs across three core challenge areas: sustainability, productivity, and urbanization.[3][4]
The fund's investment philosophy emphasizes deep industry expertise combined with strategic corporate partnerships. Zacua partners with top-tier corporates in the built environment sector to provide portfolio companies with more than just capital—they offer access to innovative technologies, strategic market insights, and unrivaled scalability through an extensive network of industry leaders.[3] This approach reflects the firm's belief that construction technology requires not just venture capital acumen, but genuine operational understanding of the sector's complexities and opportunities.
Zacua's key sectors include construction technology (ConTech), green building innovations, smart building solutions, and infrastructure development.[6] The firm operates with a truly global footprint, maintaining regional presence in San Francisco, Madrid, New York, Mexico City, and Singapore, enabling it to identify and support entrepreneurs across multiple geographies and market contexts.[1]
Zacua Ventures was founded in 2022 by partners with more than 30 years of combined industry experience, including Vivin Hegde, Mauricio Weiss, and Juan Nieto, who collectively serve as founding partners.[1][3][5] What distinguishes this founding team is their decade-long track record of investing specifically in construction technology—they didn't enter the space as generalist venture capitalists, but as practitioners who understood the sector's pain points intimately.
Vivin Hegde brings 15 years of experience as both an operator and investor, having worked across four continents and served as an advisor and board member to multiple firms.[3] Mauricio Weiss combines jobsite experience with venture capital expertise gained through his work at Cemex Ventures, giving him firsthand knowledge of what successful technology implementation requires in construction.[3] Juan Nieto brings legal and startup ecosystem experience, having transitioned from international M&A law to venture capital focused on technology across Latin America.[3] This combination of construction expertise, venture capital experience, and geographic diversity shaped the firm's founding thesis: that the built environment sector needed specialized capital paired with deep industry networks.
The firm has demonstrated momentum in its early years, with one fund closed in February 2024 and another fund in market as of July 2025, indicating active capital deployment and investor confidence.[5]
Unlike traditional venture firms that may dabble in construction technology, Zacua's partners have spent the last decade specifically investing in ConTech. This specialization translates into pattern recognition, relationship capital, and operational insights that generalist VCs cannot replicate. The team understands not just the technology, but the regulatory environment, procurement cycles, and corporate decision-making processes that determine whether a construction tech startup succeeds or fails.
Zacua's defining structural advantage is its backing by "the most innovative corporates in the built world."[1] Rather than operating as a standalone fund, Zacua functions as a bridge between cutting-edge startups and established industry players. Portfolio companies gain direct access to potential customers, pilot opportunities, and distribution channels through these corporate relationships—a form of value creation that extends far beyond capital provision.
The firm's five regional offices (San Francisco, Madrid, New York, Mexico City, and Singapore) enable it to identify opportunities across different markets while maintaining deep local knowledge. This geographic diversity also allows portfolio companies to scale globally by leveraging Zacua's network across continents, rather than remaining confined to a single market.
Zacua explicitly emphasizes impact alongside returns, with stated values of going "the extra mile," building trust, and seeking impact.[3] This manifests in concrete ways—the firm actively supports portfolio companies in achieving high ESG standards and drives the industry forward to address climate and productivity challenges. This values-driven approach attracts founders who view venture capital as a partner in solving systemic problems, not just extracting returns.
Zacua operates at the intersection of three powerful macro trends reshaping the global economy. First, the construction industry faces an acute productivity crisis—despite being one of the world's largest sectors, construction has seen minimal productivity gains over decades, making it ripe for technological disruption. Second, climate change and sustainability imperatives are forcing the built environment to fundamentally transform its materials, processes, and energy consumption patterns. Third, rapid urbanization in emerging markets is creating massive infrastructure demands that cannot be met through traditional construction methods alone.
The timing for Zacua's emergence in 2022 proved fortuitous. The construction industry was beginning to recognize that digital transformation was not optional but existential. Corporate construction firms were establishing venture arms and innovation labs, creating the exact partnership opportunities Zacua's model depends upon. Simultaneously, venture capital was beginning to recognize that construction technology, despite its fragmentation and complexity, represented a multi-trillion-dollar opportunity.
Zacua's influence on the broader ecosystem extends beyond individual portfolio company successes. The firm actively contributes to industry knowledge through research initiatives, including their 2025 ConTech Investor Survey and reports on emerging infrastructure trends.[4] By publishing insights about market dynamics and investor sentiment, Zacua helps educate the broader venture community about construction technology opportunities, effectively expanding the total capital flowing into the sector.
Zacua Ventures represents a maturing thesis: that specialized venture capital, when paired with deep industry expertise and corporate partnerships, can unlock innovation in traditionally fragmented sectors. The firm's ability to attract both venture capital and corporate backing suggests that this model resonates with sophisticated investors who recognize that construction technology requires more than generic startup playbooks.
Looking forward, Zacua's trajectory will likely be shaped by several factors. The firm's success will depend on whether its portfolio companies can achieve meaningful scale—construction technology has historically struggled with customer acquisition and implementation timelines, and Zacua's corporate partnerships will be tested by their ability to accelerate these dynamics. Additionally, as climate regulations tighten globally, the sustainability-focused portion of Zacua's portfolio may experience accelerated tailwinds, particularly in Europe and North America.
The broader question for Zacua is whether specialized venture capital can sustain competitive returns in a sector where adoption cycles are long and competition from both traditional construction firms and well-capitalized tech giants is intensifying. If Zacua can demonstrate that its model produces outsized returns while driving genuine industry transformation, it will likely inspire a wave of similar specialized funds focused on other fragmented, high-impact sectors. Conversely, if construction technology proves too capital-intensive or adoption-constrained for venture returns, Zacua may need to evolve its thesis or accept lower return profiles in exchange for impact.
The firm's positioning as a bridge between entrepreneurship and established industry players positions it well for the next decade of built environment transformation—a period when the sector's digital and sustainability transition will create both significant risks and extraordinary opportunities for capital deployed with genuine sector expertise.