Last year, construction spending in New York City was up 26%, to $36 billion. And construction employment in the Big Apple, at 122,975, was the highest it’s been since 2008, according to the New York Building Congress. Of that dollar total, spending on nonresidential construction increased by 20% to $9.8 billion, the first time since 2010 that nonresidential spending grew year-to-year.
Those heady numbers, though, are no guarantees of future spending. In fact, New York is among the major metros—including Washington D.C., Phoenix, and San Diego—where office building development and construction are tailing off from historic levels or cooling down, according to CoStar, the real estate market research firm, in its report on the national office market trends for the first quarter of 2015.
The good news is that an estimated 108 million sf of office space were under construction in the U.S. at the end of the first quarter, a 17% gain over the same period a year ago. That construction level approached the historical average of 122 million sf, which the country last achieved in late 2008.
The cautionary news is that 15 million sf of office space were delivered in the first quarter of 2015, the first time in the latest economic cycle that deliveries exceeded net absorptions, which during that quarter were 12 million sf.
CoStar estimates that construction levels are above historic norms in about one-third of the largest U.S. metros. It singles out Silicon Valley in Northern California, which is seeing a rash of corporate campuses springing up. Other above-average office construction markets include Dallas-Fort Worth, Raleigh, Boston, and Chicago.
The researcher cites a shift in strategy among office building developers such as Boston Properties, which is using capital from the sale of older for new developments with potentially higher yields. Boston Properties has 11 office projects totaling 3.3 million sf in its current development pipeline.
CoStar notes that while rising rents are driving the office construction booms in certain markets like San Francisco, two thirds of the country’s metros are still not seeing the kind of rent appreciation that would justify large-scale new office construction.
That being said, among the notable deliveries in the first quarter was the 1.5-million-sf second phase of ExxonMobil’s corporate campus in Houston, which is also where a 1.7-million-sf campus that is fully leased to FMC Technologies got started during the quarter.
Lincoln Property started the first new office building in San Francisco’s Financial District in a decade, a 433,000-sf project that, despite being built on spec, shouldn’t have too much trouble finding tenants in a market whose office vacancy rate for four- and five-star buildings is 7.8%.
Related Stories
| Aug 30, 2013
State Government Report [2013 Giants 300 Report]
Stantec, Jacobs, PCL Construction among nation's top state government design and construction firms, according to BD+C's 2013 Giants 300 Report.
| Aug 28, 2013
Federal Government Report [2013 Giants 300 Report]
Building Design+Construction's rankings of the nation's largest federal government design and construction firms, as reported in the 2013 Giants 300 Report.
| Aug 26, 2013
What you missed last week: Architecture billings up again; record year for hotel renovations; nation's most expensive real estate markets
BD+C's roundup of the top construction market news for the week of August 18 includes the latest architecture billings index from AIA and a BOMA study on the nation's most and least expensive commercial real estate markets.
| Aug 23, 2013
5 most (and least) expensive commercial real estate markets
With an average cost per square foot of $16.11, Stamford, Conn., is the most costly U.S. market for commercial real estate, according to a new study by the Building Owners and Managers Association International. New York and San Francisco are also among the nation's priciest markets.
| Aug 22, 2013
Energy-efficient glazing technology [AIA Course]
This course discuses the latest technological advances in glazing, which make possible ever more efficient enclosures with ever greater glazed area.
| Aug 22, 2013
6 visionary strategies for local government projects
Civic projects in Boston, Las Vegas, Austin, and suburban Atlanta show that a ‘big vision’ can also be a spur to neighborhood revitalization. Here are six visionary strategies for local government projects.
| Aug 22, 2013
Warehouse remake: Conversion project turns derelict freight terminal into modern office space [slideshow]
The goal of the Freight development is to attract businesses to an abandoned industrial zone north of downtown Denver.
| Aug 20, 2013
Code amendment in Dallas would limit building exterior reflectivity
The Dallas City Council is expected to vote soon on a proposed code amendment that would limit a building’s exterior reflectivity of “visible light” to 15%.
| Aug 16, 2013
Today's workplace design: Is there room for the introvert?
Increasingly, roaming social networks are praised and hierarchical organizations disparaged, as workplaces mimic the freewheeling vibe of the Internet. Research by Susan Cain indicates that the "openness" pendulum may have swung too far.
| Aug 14, 2013
Green Building Report [2013 Giants 300 Report]
Building Design+Construction's rankings of the nation's largest green design and construction firms.