Modernization that leans heavier on technology to attract a younger, diverse, and skilled workforce is likely to determine the future success and growth of New York’s construction industry.
That is one of the key takeaways from a “State of the Construction Industry” survey of 20 New York metro-area AEC firms that the accounting consultancy Anchin, Block & Anchin conducted last November, and whose results it released earlier this month.
The report found a New York market that is at once resilient and facing “unprecedented challenges.” Its “most pressing” issues, as stated by nearly two-thirds of the firms polled, are labor shortages and public funding for infrastructure projects. Retaining talent is critical to these companies, and has led AEC firms toward greater flexibility about allowing remote or hybrid work, and increasing worker salaries. Thirty percent of the firms polled are focusing on management training and career development.
LIFE SCIENCES AND INDUSTRIAL SEEN AS GROWTH SECTORS
Since the coronavirus pandemic was declared in March 2020, more than half of the firms surveyed have diversified into the infrastructure sector, no doubt in anticipation of the $1.2 trillion federal infrastructure bill that President Biden signed into law last November. Eighty-five percent of the AEC firms polled expect infrastructure to be their market’s “busiest” sector over the next five to 10 years, followed by the life sciences/healthcare sector (into which nearly half of the firms polled diversified over the past 18 months}.
The survey’s authors also point to the industrial sector’s “growing momentum” as an in-demand asset driven by e-commerce.
However, AEC firms lamented the pressures being exerted on their companies’ cashflows from, most prominently, slower client payments, labor and materials cost inflation, insurance costs, and project delays.
Half of the survey’s respondents said that their volume of work has increased during the pandemic, by an average of 36 percent. But 30 percent reported decreases in their companies’ work volumes, by an average of 22 percent. And 42 percent of those polled said their backlogs were down from 2019, by an average of 43 percent.
RESILIENCE AND SUSTAINABILITY ARE CENTRAL
The usual suspects—tunnels, roads, bridges, rail stations—were cited by the survey’s respondents as being among the structures desperate for repair or replacement. A surprising 40 percent of the firms polled also identified “decarbonization” as a need, most probably because of New York’s Local Law 97, which passed in 2019, and creates carbon emissions limits for most commercial buildings over 25,000 sf, as well as alternative paths for the law’s two compliance periods: 2024-2029, and 2030-2034. Building owners must submit emission intensity reports, stamped by a registered design professional, every year starting in 2025 or face substantial fines.
“The overwhelming trend relates to resilience, particularly in the face of a growing urban population; and sustainability/climate change needs, which are being felt acutely,” the report states.
Related Stories
Industry Research | Dec 28, 2022
Following a strong year, design and construction firms view 2023 cautiously
The economy and inflation are the biggest concerns for U.S. architecture, construction, and engineering firms in 2023, according to a recent survey of AEC professionals by the editors of Building Design+Construction.
Self-Storage Facilities | Dec 16, 2022
Self-storage development booms in high multifamily construction areas
A 2022 RentCafe analysis finds that self-storage units swelled in conjunction with metros’ growth in apartment complexes.
Market Data | Dec 13, 2022
Contractors' backlog of work reaches three-year high
U.S. construction firms have, on average, 9.2 months of work in the pipeline, according to ABC's latest Construction Backlog Indicator.
Contractors | Dec 6, 2022
Slow payments cost the construction industry $208 billion in 2022
The cost of floating payments for wages and invoices represents $208 billion in excess cost to the construction industry, a 53% increase from 2021, according to a survey by Rabbet, a provider of construction finance software.
Mass Timber | Dec 1, 2022
Cross laminated timber market forecast to more than triple by end of decade
Cross laminated timber (CLT) is gaining acceptance as an eco-friendly building material, a trend that will propel its growth through the end of the 2020s. The CLT market is projected to more than triple from $1.11 billion in 2021 to $3.72 billion by 2030, according to a report from Polaris Market Research.
Market Data | Nov 15, 2022
Construction demand will be a double-edged sword in 2023
Skanska’s latest forecast sees shorter lead times and receding inflation, but the industry isn’t out of the woods yet.
Reconstruction & Renovation | Nov 8, 2022
Renovation work outpaces new construction for first time in two decades
Renovations of older buildings in U.S. cities recently hit a record high as reflected in architecture firm billings, according to the American Institute of Architects (AIA).
Market Data | Nov 3, 2022
Building material prices have become the calm in America’s economic storm
Linesight’s latest quarterly report predicts stability (mostly) through the first half of 2023
Building Team | Nov 1, 2022
Nonresidential construction spending increases slightly in September, says ABC
National nonresidential construction spending was up by 0.5% in September, according to an Associated Builders and Contractors analysis of data published today by the U.S. Census Bureau.
Hotel Facilities | Oct 31, 2022
These three hoteliers make up two-thirds of all new hotel development in the U.S.
With a combined 3,523 projects and 400,490 rooms in the pipeline, Marriott, Hilton, and InterContinental dominate the U.S. hotel construction sector.