1. Apple is building a 192-room hotel on its billion-dollar Austin Campus (BD+C)
"The hotel will give Apple more control over all aspects of where visitors to the Austin campus will stay."
2. Is CLT really a green solution? (BD+C)
"CLT is intended to replace concrete and steel whose production accounts for about 13% of global carbon dioxide emissions. Wood in CLT panels pulled CO2 from the atmosphere, and that carbon should remain locked up as long as the building stands."
3. Will Remote Working Spell the Demise of the Office Sector? (National Real Estate Investor)
"While some tech and banking firms are considering major shifts to permanent work-from-home policies, offices will still be around."
4. Biggest U.S. Mall Is Two Months Delinquent on $1.4 Billion Loan (Bloomberg, National Real Estate Investor)
"The Mall of America missed two months of payments on a $1.4 billion CMBS loan."
5. Mechanics liens up 40% as COVID-19 pandemic disrupts industry (Construction Dive)
"U.S. mechanics lien filings have risen significantly since the COVID-19 pandemic shut down all but the most essential projects in many states, according to notice and lien service provider Levelset. The number of liens filed through March 2020 jumped 40% since January."
6. ULI Forecasts Strong CRE Growth to Return in 2022 (Commercial Property Executive)
"Despite numerous uncertainties, economic and real estate recovery should begin in the second half of 2020, followed by stronger growth in 2021 and significant growth in 2022, according to the Urban Land Institute’s semi-annual Real Estate Economic Forecast. The three-year 'consensus' forecast measures 27 economic and real estate factors and represents the average of forecasts from 39 economists/analysts at 35 real estate organizations. The 17th semi-annual forecast was based on responses collected from May 1 to May 18."
Related Stories
Multifamily Housing | Jan 27, 2021
2021 multifamily housing outlook: Dallas, Miami, D.C., will lead apartment completions
In its latest outlook report for the multifamily rental market, Yardi Matrix outlined several reasons for hope for a solid recovery for the multifamily housing sector in 2021, especially during the second half of the year.
Market Data | Jan 26, 2021
Construction employment in December trails pre-pandemic levels in 34 states
Texas and Vermont have worst February-December losses while Virginia and Alabama add the most.
Market Data | Jan 19, 2021
Architecture Billings continue to lose ground
The pace of decline during December accelerated from November.
Market Data | Jan 19, 2021
2021 construction forecast: Nonresidential building spending will drop 5.7%, bounce back in 2022
Healthcare and public safety are the only nonresidential construction sectors that will see growth in spending in 2021, according to AIA's 2021 Consensus Construction Forecast.
Market Data | Jan 13, 2021
Atlanta, Dallas seen as most favorable U.S. markets for commercial development in 2021, CBRE analysis finds
U.S. construction activity is expected to bounce back in 2021, after a slowdown in 2020 due to challenges brought by COVID-19.
Market Data | Jan 13, 2021
Nonres construction could be in for a long recovery period
Rider Levett Bucknall’s latest cost report singles out unemployment and infrastructure spending as barometers.
Market Data | Jan 13, 2021
Contractor optimism improves as ABC’s Construction Backlog inches up in December
ABC’s Construction Confidence Index readings for sales, profit margins, and staffing levels increased in December.
Market Data | Jan 11, 2021
Turner Construction Company launches SourceBlue Brand
SourceBlue draws upon 20 years of supply chain management experience in the construction industry.
Market Data | Jan 8, 2021
Construction sector adds 51,000 jobs in December
Gains are likely temporary as new industry survey finds widespread pessimism for 2021.
Market Data | Jan 7, 2021
Few construction firms will add workers in 2021 as industry struggles with declining demand, growing number of project delays and cancellations
New industry outlook finds most contractors expect demand for many categories of construction to decline.