Leopardo Companies, Inc. released its 2015 Construction Economics Report and Outlook, an essential guide to help business leaders, healthcare administrators, and government decision-makers understand the factors that impact construction costs.
This year’s report shows that different factors have opposing effects on construction costs. Low oil prices greatly reduce the cost of construction, and some material costs have come down over the past year.
But these factors reducing cost are more than offset by the strong increase in labor costs, brought on by a shortage of skilled workers as more than 25% of Illinois construction workers left the industry over the past five years. The overall effect is that construction costs are rising as development volume increases in Chicago and across Illinois.
“Organizations that are considering new construction and renovation projects need to understand the factors in the economy and in the construction industry that may affect the timing and cost of their projects,” said Leopardo President Rick Mattioda. “Our annual Construction Economics Report and Outlook offers a wealth of useful information to help people make informed decisions when building.”
To create the report, Leopardo analyzed economic and construction industry data from universally respected sources, and utilized that data as well as the experience of the firm’s principals to forecast the direction of construction costs over the next year.
The report provides current and recent costs relating to:
• Construction materials, including steel, wood, concrete, asphalt, aluminum, copper and paint
• Oil, electricity and other energy sources
• Union and general wage increases for construction workers and specialty contractors
• Average markup of contractor and subcontractor bids
Also included in the report is economic data such as the Producer Price Index, the Consumer Price Index, employment projections for Illinois, and construction spending by industry.
The report concludes with a snapshot of construction volume and trends by property type, including office, warehouse, hotel, multifamily residential, healthcare, educational, entertainment, and public-sector properties.
Related Stories
Contractors | Nov 12, 2015
Construction will outpace worldwide GDP growth over the next 15 years
Three countries—the United States, China, and India—will account for nearly three-fifths of worldwide construction growth over the next 15 years, according to a new report from Global Construction Perspectives and Oxford Economics.
Contractors | Nov 5, 2015
Budget bill provision raises OSHA fines for first time in 25 years
Inflation-adjusted penalty hikes could go up as much as 80%.
Contractors | Nov 3, 2015
ABC, AIA & NAHB: Residential, nonresidential construction growth expected in 2016
Economists from the three trade associations discussed several indicators for sector performance in a joint web conference.
Contractors | Nov 2, 2015
ABC: September's nonresidential spending slip no cause for concern
Despite the monthly drop, September's year-over-year increase is largest in seven years. Seven of 16 nonresidential construction sectors saw spending increases.
Contractors | Oct 30, 2015
ABC: Economic growth stronger than headline GDP figure suggests
GDP expanded 1.5% during the third quarter while nonresidential fixed investment expanded by 2.1% during that period.
BIM and Information Technology | Oct 29, 2015
MIT develops ‘river of 3D pixels’ to assemble objects
The Kinetic Blocks can manipulate objects into shapes without human interference.
Contractors | Oct 28, 2015
Office construction costs highest in New York City, San Francisco, says CBRE
A CBRE report found that New York’s construction costs are more than $500 per sf. San Francisco isn’t too far behind.
Contractors | Oct 16, 2015
ABC report: Confidence rises during the first half of the year
In the first half, sales expectations and profit margin expectations rose while staffing level intentions dipped slightly.
Contractors | Oct 7, 2015
Construction equipment continues to be vulnerable to theft
Poor security and lax inventory control make jobsites sitting ducks for robbers, according to crime-data analysis by LoJack.
Office Buildings | Oct 5, 2015
Renderings revealed for Apple's second 'spaceship': a curvy, lush office complex in Sunnyvale
The project has been dubbed as another “spaceship,” referencing the nickname for the loop-shaped Apple Campus under construction in Cupertino.