Reed Construction Data has announced that the dollar value of construction starts in June, excluding residential activity, surged 34% versus May. The figures are in "current" dollars, meaning they are not adjusted for inflation.
The individual month of June, at $32.0 billion, was one of the strongest in Reed's entire database. To find a similarly high volume, one has to look back at June 2008, just before the Great Recession really took hold.
The one-third increase was an outsized gain, even after taking into account seasonality. Reed's long-term average May-to-June increase has been 4.5%. By comparison, May's month-to-month percentage change was +6.2% and April's -4.5%.
June starts this year compared with June of last year were +14.4%. The year-to-date level of total nonresidential construction starts, at $138 billion, was +2.4% when compared with the same January to June period of 2013.
Nonresidential construction accounts for a considerably larger share than of the total than residential work. The former's proportion of total put-in-place construction in the Census Bureau's May report was 62% versus the latter's 38%.
Reed's construction starts are leading indicators for the Census Bureau's capital investment or put-in-place series.
After a shockingly harsh winter, during which GDP contracted, the U.S. economy is back on an expansionary path with stock market indices near record highs and the unemployment rate close to the nation's 20-year average of 6.0%. Firms in the private sector are feeling more pressure to build new facilities.
The month-to-month leaders among major nonresidential construction categories were commercial +39%, and heavy engineering +34.7%. Institutional work was also up +3.6%, but to a much lesser degree. Industrial starts recorded a large percentage gain, but it came on top of a smaller dollar volume than the other three.
Commercial starts this June were even more impressive, +48.5%, when compared with June of last year. Engineering starts this June versus the same month last year were +13.7%. Institutional starts were -8.1%.
Year to date, heavy engineering (+13%) is out front, followed by institutional (+5.9%). Commercial starts (-14.5%) are still down from last year. Industrial work is 13.5%.
In commercial construction's two largest sub-categories, retail starts were +8.3% month to month, but -8.1% year to date, while private office building starts were +81.6% month to month and +29.6 year to date.
In the institutional category of work, school and college starts were +7.5% month to month and +9.7% year over year. Hospital/clinic starts moved in the opposite direction, -43.2% month to month and -12.3% year to date.
With the exception of dam/marine work, all the sub-categories of heavy engineering construction were ahead both month to month and year to date, with water and sewage work especially strong versus May, +40.2.
Institutional and heavy engineering work have especially close ties to government finances. Washington's deficit is diminishing, although the debt load remains high. At the state and local levels, the ongoing improvement in the overall economy is providing budgetary payoffs.
The nonresidential construction sector will derive benefits from taxes that are increasing naturally. Stronger employment and higher incomes lift income tax revenues; advances in consumer spending yield more sales taxes; and rising home prices translate into improved property taxes.
The value of construction starts each month is summarized from Reed's database of all active construction projects in the U.S. Missing project values are estimated with the help of RSMeans' building cost models.
See Reed Construction Data's full Construction Industry Snapshot here.
Related Stories
Curtain Wall | Aug 15, 2024
7 steps to investigating curtain wall leaks
It is common for significant curtain wall leakage to involve multiple variables. Therefore, a comprehensive multi-faceted investigation is required to determine the origin of leakage, according to building enclosure consultants Richard Aeck and John A. Rudisill with Rimkus.
MFPRO+ News | Aug 14, 2024
Report outlines how Atlanta can collaborate with private sector to spur more housing construction
A report by an Urban Land Institute’s Advisory Services panel, commissioned by the city’s housing authority, Atlanta Housing (AH), offered ways the city could collaborate with developers to spur more housing construction.
Adaptive Reuse | Aug 14, 2024
KPF unveils design for repositioning of Norman Foster’s 8 Canada Square tower in London
8 Canada Square, a Norman Foster-designed office building that’s currently the global headquarters of HSBC Holdings, will have large sections of its façade removed to create landscaped terraces. The project, designed by KPF, will be the world’s largest transformation of an office tower into a sustainable mixed-use building.
Sustainability | Aug 14, 2024
World’s first TRUE Zero Waste for Construction-certified public project delivered in Calif.
The Contra Costa County Administration Building in Martinez, Calif., is the world’s first public project to achieve the zero-waste-focused TRUE Gold certification for construction. The TRUE Certification for Construction program, administered by Green Business Certification Inc. (GBCI), recognizes projects that achieve exceptional levels of waste reduction, reuse, and recycling.
Modular Building | Aug 13, 2024
Strategies for attainable housing design with modular construction
Urban, market-rate housing that lower-income workers can actually afford is one of our country’s biggest needs. For multifamily designers, this challenge presents several opportunities for creating housing that workers can afford on their salaries.
University Buildings | Aug 12, 2024
Planning for growing computer science programs
Driven by emerging AI developments and digital transformation in the business world, university computer science programs are projected to grow by nearly 15% by 2030.
Energy Efficiency | Aug 9, 2024
Artificial intelligence could help reduce energy consumption by as much as 40% by 2050
Artificial intelligence could help U.S. buildings to significantly reduce energy consumption and carbon emissions, according to a paper by researchers at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
Sponsored | Healthcare Facilities | Aug 8, 2024
U.S. healthcare building sector trends and innovations for 2024-2025
As new medicines, treatment regimens, and clinical protocols radically alter the medical world, facilities and building environments in which they take form are similarly evolving rapidly. Innovations and trends related to products, materials, assemblies, and building systems for the U.S. healthcare building sector have opened new avenues for better care delivery. Discussions with leading healthcare architecture, engineering, and construction (AEC) firms and owners-operators offer insights into some of the most promising directions. This course is worth 1.0 AIA/HSW learning unit.
Office Buildings | Aug 8, 2024
6 design trends for the legal workplace
Law firms differ from many professional organizations in their need for private offices to meet confidentiality with clients and write and review legal documents in quiet, focused environments
Data Centers | Aug 8, 2024
Global edge data center market to cross $300 billion by 2026, says JLL
Technological megatrends, including IoT and generative AI, will require computing power to be closer to data generation and consumption, fueling growth of edge IT infrastructure, according to a new JLL report.