flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Axiometrics predicts apartment deliveries will peak by mid 2017

Multifamily Housing

Axiometrics predicts apartment deliveries will peak by mid 2017

New York is projected to lead the nation next year, thanks to construction delays in 2016.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | November 28, 2016

Next month, the five-story 3435 Main Street in Kansas City, Mo., this city's first factory-built apartment building, will be ready for delivery. (Its 100 modules were produced at Champion Home Builders' factory in Nebraska). Nationally, the market researcher Axiometrics expects apartment deliveries to soar through mid 2017, and then start to recede through 2018. Image: Courtesy MAC Properties

In its latest report, the Census Bureau estimates that annualized starts of structures with five or more units stood at 445,000 in October, up 28.2% over the same month a year earlier. However, multifamily permits were only 5.8% higher.

Could the long-predicted slowdown in the multifamily boom finally be happening? The market researcher Axiometrics looked at its identified supply data and concludes that multifamily deliveries could peak by mid-year 2017.

Over the next three quarters, though, this market sector should continue to thrive. Axiometrics expects deliveries to growth by more than 10%, to 91,957, in the fourth quarter of 2016, and then recede a bit to 91,721 in the first quarter of 2017 (which would still be nearly 49% more than 1Q 2016), and then jump again to 102,617 deliveries in the second quarter of 2017, which would be 48.5% more than 2Q 2016.

Axiometrics estimates that a total of 343,582 new apartment units will come onto the market in 2017, 55.7% of which in the first half of the year.

 

 

Axiometrics estimates that 343,582 apartment units will come onto the market next year, more than half in the first six months. Image: Axiometrics

 

New York is expected to lead the nation in new apartment deliveries next year, with 27,210, representing an 88% leap over 2016 deliveries. (Three of New York’s boroughs—Brooklyn, Queens, and Midtown Manhattan—are among the top 10 submarkets for projected deliveries in 2017.)

Axiometrics points out, though, that New York’s delivery schedule “is a telling example of how construction delays have affected the apartment market.” Those delays are, in part, the result of an ongoing construction labor shortage that other data have shown is expected to continue for at least the next year.

Indeed, New York’s apartment deliveries are expected to fall precipitously in 2018, to 13,312.

Following New York in projected apartment deliveries next year are Dallas (up 36% to 23,821), Houston (which will actually be down 21.2% to 17,313), Atlanta (up 38.8% to 13,210) and Washington D.C. (up 33.7% to 13.141).

All of these metros are expected to see deliveries plummet in 2018, which Houston expected to deliver only 956 new apartment units that year.

 

 

 

The leading metros for multifamily deliveries are all expected to see significant falloffs by 2018. Image: Axiometrics

 

Axiometrics states that most of new apartments that come onto the market will be absorbed because “the U.S. economy remains in growth mode.” However, by this time next year, apartment deliveries should scale back to more historically normal quarterly levels, in the mid 60,000 units range.

Related Stories

Multifamily Housing | Feb 25, 2022

First set of multifamily properties achieve BREEAM certification in the U.S.

WashREIT says it has achieved certification on eight multifamily assets under BREEAM’s In-Use certification standard.

Multifamily Housing | Feb 24, 2022

First new, mixed-use high-rise in Detroit’s central business district in nearly 30 years opens

City Club Apartments completed two multifamily projects in 2021 in downtown Detroit including the first new, mixed-use high-rise in Detroit’s central business district in nearly 30 years.

Codes and Standards | Feb 21, 2022

More bad news on sea level rise for U.S. coastal areas

A new government report predicts sea levels in the U.S. of 10 to 12 inches higher by 2050, with some major cities on the East and Gulf coasts experiencing damaging floods even on sunny days.

Urban Planning | Feb 14, 2022

5 steps to remake suburbs into green communities where people want to live, work, and play

Stantec's John Bachmann offers proven tactic for retrofitting communities for success in the post-COVID era.

Senior Living Design | Feb 11, 2022

Design for senior living: A chat with Rocky Berg, AIA

Rob Cassidy, Editor of MULTIFAMILY Design + Construction, chats with Rocky Berg, AIA, Principal with Dallas architecture firm three, about how to design senior living communities to meet the needs of the owner, seniors, their families, and staff.

Multifamily Housing | Feb 8, 2022

Suffolk to build Alba Palm Beach

The project will feature 55 residences.

| Feb 4, 2022

New apartment complex Dixon Place honors the history of Salt Lake City

Salt Lake City’s Sugar House neighborhood has been experiencing somewhat of a renaissance as of late, and the opening of new apartment community Dixon Place continues that trend. MVE + Partners took leadership in the design of the 59-unit, Class A development.  

Sponsored | Steel Buildings | Jan 25, 2022

Multifamily + Hospitality: Benefits of building in long-span composite floor systems

Long-span composite floor systems provide unique advantages in the construction of multi-family and hospitality facilities. This introductory course explains what composite deck is, how it works, what typical composite deck profiles look like and provides guidelines for using composite floor systems. This is a nano unit course.

Coronavirus | Jan 20, 2022

Advances and challenges in improving indoor air quality in commercial buildings

Michael Dreidger, CEO of IAQ tech startup Airsset speaks with BD+C's John Caulfield about how building owners and property managers can improve their buildings' air quality.

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