flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

AIA foresees nonres building spending increasing, but at a slower pace than in 2016

Market Data

AIA foresees nonres building spending increasing, but at a slower pace than in 2016

Expects another double-digit growth year for office construction, but a more modest uptick for health-related building.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | January 31, 2017

AIA is positive about spending growth for nonresidential building over the next two years, but notes this sector might be at the tail end of the current construction cycle. Image: Unsplash via Pixabay

Despite what it describes as a “chaotic” year saddled with labor shortages and interest-rate creep, the American Institute of Architects (AIA) estimates that spending for nonresidential construction increased by nearly 8% in 2016. That growth is expected to continue for “another couple of years,” albeit somewhat more modestly.

The AIA Consensus Forecast projects a 5.6% increase in nonres construction spending this year, and 4.8% in 2018, with commercial and industrial sectors growing at slower rates. (AIA did not include dollar amounts with its forecast.) And certain sectors, such as offices and hotels, are expected to cool considerably.

Offices, which increased by more than 20% in 2016, will grow 10.6% this year and by 4.6% in 2018, by AIA’s reckoning. Hotel spending, up 25% last year, should rise by 7.2% in 2017, but only by 1.8% the following year, according to AIA projections. Spending on healthcare building is expected to stay at nearly 5% growth this year and next.

 

 

Office construction spending is expected to stay relatively strong this year, with some fading in 2018. But hotel construction is expected to experience a significant decline. Image: AIA Consensus Construction Forecast.

 

AIA’s forecast is in line with other industry watchers, with the notable exception of a rosier portrait painted by Dodge Data and Analytics, which estimates that nonres spending, at $406.9 billion last year, will increase by 8.2% this year and by 7.3% in 2018. Dodge is far more bullish than AIA on office construction. But it also sees negative growth in the hotel sector in 2018.

On the flip side, FMI expects growth this year to be only 4.4%, and 4.1% in 2018, and foresees a weaker industrial sector than some of the other prognosticators.

Kermit Baker, Hon. AIA, AIA’s chief economist, addressed several issues affecting construction spending that could be impacted by the new Trump administration. For example, infrastructure spending, which is currently at about $1.2 trillion a year, could get a big boost if proposals to spend another $1 trillion over the next decade are realized.

The proposed repeal of the Affordable Care Act, and what would replace it are serious concerns for a construction industry where healthcare accounts for about 10% of total spending.

Trump has also promised “massive” regulatory rollbacks, especially on the environment front. Baker cites an NAHB study posted last May that attributes 24.3% of the price of a single-family home to government regulations. (Three-fifths of this is due to higher finished lot costs resulting from regulations.)

Baker also touches immigration restrictions that could “exacerbate an already serious labor problem” in a construction industry that is “most reliant on immigration for its workforce.”

On the whole, though, AIA is “quite positive” about the prospects for the construction sector, which it expects to outperform the broader economy over the next two years. However, AIA also see an industry “on the down side of this construction cycle.” The commercial sector is expected to show signs of slowing first, and AIA foresees its growth rate dropping from 17% in 2017, to 8% this year and just over 4% in 2018.

“Being this late in the cycle, the industry is more vulnerable to external disruptions, and the list of possibilities in this category is very long at present,” Baker writes.

Related Stories

Market Data | Jan 31, 2022

Canada's hotel construction pipeline ends 2021 with 262 projects and 35,325 rooms

At the close of 2021, projects under construction stand at 62 projects/8,100 rooms.

Market Data | Jan 27, 2022

Record high counts for franchise companies in the early planning stage at the end of Q4'21

Through year-end 2021, Marriott, Hilton, and IHG branded hotels represented 585 new hotel openings with 73,415 rooms.

Market Data | Jan 27, 2022

Dallas leads as the top market by project count in the U.S. hotel construction pipeline at year-end 2021

The market with the greatest number of projects already in the ground, at the end of the fourth quarter, is New York with 90 projects/14,513 rooms.

Market Data | Jan 26, 2022

2022 construction forecast: Healthcare, retail, industrial sectors to lead ‘healthy rebound’ for nonresidential construction

A panel of construction industry economists forecasts 5.4 percent growth for the nonresidential building sector in 2022, and a 6.1 percent bump in 2023.

Market Data | Jan 24, 2022

U.S. hotel construction pipeline stands at 4,814 projects/581,953 rooms at year-end 2021

Projects scheduled to start construction in the next 12 months stand at 1,821 projects/210,890 rooms at the end of the fourth quarter.

Market Data | Jan 19, 2022

Architecture firms end 2021 on a strong note

December’s Architectural Billings Index (ABI) score of 52.0 was an increase from 51.0 in November.

Market Data | Jan 13, 2022

Materials prices soar 20% in 2021 despite moderating in December

Most contractors in association survey list costs as top concern in 2022.

Market Data | Jan 12, 2022

Construction firms forsee growing demand for most types of projects

Seventy-four percent of firms plan to hire in 2022 despite supply-chain and labor challenges.

Market Data | Jan 7, 2022

Construction adds 22,000 jobs in December

Jobless rate falls to 5% as ongoing nonresidential recovery offsets rare dip in residential total.

Market Data | Jan 6, 2022

Inflation tempers optimism about construction in North America

Rider Levett Bucknall’s latest report cites labor shortages and supply chain snags among causes for cost increases.  

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021