The current industrial production of polymer building blocks such as ε-caprolactone (ε-CL) and 6-hydroxyhexanoic acid (6HA) is a multi-step process associated with critical environmental issues such as the generation of toxic waste and high energy consumption. Consequently, there is a demand for more eco-efficient and sustainable production routes. This study deals with the generation of a platform organism that converts cyclohexane to such polymer building blocks without the formation of byproducts and under environmentally benign conditions. Based on kinetic and thermodynamic analyses of the individual enzymatic steps, we rationally engineered a 4-step enzymatic cascade in Pseudomonas taiwanensis VLB120 via stepwise biocatalyst improvement on the genetic level. We found that the intermediate product cyclohexanol severely inhibits the cascade and optimized the cascade by enhancing the expression level of downstream enzymes. The integration of a lactonase enabled exclusive 6HA formation without side products. The resulting biocatalyst showed a high activity of 44.8 ± 0.2 U gCDW-1 and fully converted 5 mM cyclohexane to 6HA within 3 h. This platform organism can now serve as a basis for the development of greener production processes for polycaprolactone and related polymers.