Design-build delivered projects will account for nearly half of all construction spending by 2025, according to the consulting and investment firm FMI’s latest market research on design-built utilization.
FMI’s research for its 50-page report is based on a survey of 279 industry stakeholders and 46 interviews. FMI conducted the study in partnership with the Design-Build Institute of America (DBIA), and piggybacks on research in 2018 that confirmed design-build was no longer just an alternative delivery method, but one that had been embraced by a growing number of owner-developers and their AEC partners.
FMI’s latest report, which it releases today, forecasts that spending for design-build construction put in place will grow at a compound annual rate of 7.6% over the years 2021 through 2025, and hit $405.7 billion in 2025, or 47% of total construction spending that year, vs 42% of the total in 2021.
FMI expects the five-year rate of growth to be higher than the national average in the West South Central, South Atlantic, Middle Atlantic, and New England regions.
CERTAIN SECTORS MORE DISPOSED TOWARD DESIGN-BUILD
Over the forecast years, FMI estimates that the aggregate spending on projects delivered via design-build will be $1.732 trillion, or 46.2% of the $3.742 trillion spent on all construction projects. Highway and street projects will account for 16% of the design-build spending, followed by Education (15%), Manufacturing (13%) and Commercial and Office (12% each). Spending on design-build water/wastewater projects is expected to show the highest annual growth rate—11.1%—although that sector will represent only 5% of total design-build project spending over the forecast years.
Design-build rated highest across all project delivery methods, with 77% of the report’s respondents having “very good” or “excellent” experiences with the method. The 2021 study found that 60% of respondents identified “owner goals and objectives” as an influence on their choice of delivery methods, following by 50% who identified a project’s complexity and innovation, and 46% who cited “delivery schedule” or “contractor experience.”
HIGH FAVORABILITY QUOTIENT
Seventy-seven percent of the study’s respondents thought that the design-build delivery method would increase over the next five years. “We have seen significantly more design-build work,” stated one respondent quoted in the report. “Virtually everything in our geography is going design-build,” said another.
Conversely, respondents with less favorable experiences with design-build delivery noted that some owners still see this method as a way of transferring risk to the building team, and underestimate the commitment needed to make this delivery method work.
Most respondents, however, saw myriad benefits in design-build. For example, 76% of architects, designers, and engineers, and 89% of GCs and CMs, cited increased collaboration and creativity. Greater project and design control was cited by 88% of GCs/CMs and 84% of specialty trade contractors. GCs/CMs (who represented 31% of the study’s respondents) like the opportunities to innovate that design-build methods afford them, as do 90% of owner’s reps.
Nearly half—47%—of organizations that responded to FMI’s survey use fixed price/lump sum contracts for their design-build projects, compared to 39% that use guaranteed max price contracts.
Related Stories
Market Data | May 2, 2018
Construction employment increases in 245 metro areas between March 2017 & 2018, as trade fights & infrastructure funding shortfalls loom
Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land, Texas and Weirton-Steubenville, W.Va.-Ohio experience largest year-over-year gains; Baton Rouge, La. and Auburn-Opelika, Ala. have biggest annual declines.
Market Data | May 2, 2018
Nonresidential Construction down in March, private sector falters, public sector unchanged
February’s spending estimate was revised roughly $10 billion higher.
Market Data | Apr 30, 2018
Outlook mixed for renewable energy installations in Middle East and Africa region
Several major MEA countries are actively supporting the growth of renewable energy.
Market Data | Apr 12, 2018
Construction costs climb in March as wide range of input costs jump
Association officials urge Trump administration, congress to fund infrastructure adequately as better way to stimulate demand than tariffs that impose steep costs on contractors and project owners.
Market Data | Apr 9, 2018
Construction employers add 228,000 jobs over the year despite dip in March
Average hourly earnings increase to $29.43 in construction, topping private sector by nearly 10%; Association officials urge updating and better funding programs to train workers for construction jobs.
Market Data | Apr 4, 2018
Construction employment increases in 257 metro areas between February 2017 & 2018 as construction firms continue to expand amid strong demand
Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, Calif. and Merced, Calif. experience largest year-over-year gains; Baton Rouge, La. and Auburn-Opelika, Ala. have biggest annual declines in construction employment.
Market Data | Apr 2, 2018
Construction spending in February inches up from January
Association officials urge federal, state and local officials to work quickly to put recently enacted funding increases to work to improve aging and over-burdened infrastructure, offset public-sector spending drops.
Market Data | Mar 29, 2018
AIA and the University of Minnesota partner to develop Guides for Equitable Practice
The Guides for Equitable Practice will be developed and implemented in three phase.
Market Data | Mar 22, 2018
Architecture billings continue to hold positive in 2018
Billings particularly strong at firms in the West and Midwest regions.
Market Data | Mar 21, 2018
Construction employment increases in 248 metro areas as new metal tariffs threaten future sector job gains
Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, Calif., and Merced, Calif., experience largest year-over-year gains; Baton Rouge, La., and Auburn-Opelika, Ala., have biggest annual declines in construction employment.