Hammer time

by The City Wire staff ([email protected]) 71 views 

McGraw-Hill Construction reports in its recently released 2010 Construction Outlook that the level of construction starts in 2010 is expected to climb 11% to $466.2 billion, following the 25% decline predicted for 2009.

Improvement for housing from extremely low levels and broader expansion for public works are cited as the key reasons for the predicted growth.

"The U.S. construction market in 2010 will be helped by growth for several sectors, following three straight years of decline that brought total construction activity down 39% from its mid-decade peak," Robert A. Murray, vice president of economic affairs for McGraw-Hill Construction, said in a statement. "The benefits from the stimulus act will broaden in scope, lifting not just highway construction but also environmental public works and several institutional structure types. With continued improvement expected for single family housing, after reaching bottom earlier this year, the overall level of construction activity should see moderate expansion in 2010."

OUTLOOK HIGHLIGHTS
• Single family housing for 2010 will advance 32% in dollars, corresponding to a 30% increase in the number of units to 560,000.

• Multifamily housing will improve 16% in dollars and 14% in units, after steep reductions in 2008 and 2009.

• Commercial buildings will drop 4% in dollars, following a steep 43% drop in 2009. The weak employment picture will further depress occupancies, making it even more difficult to justify new construction.

• Institutional buildings will begin to stabilize after losing momentum in 2009. Square footage will retreat another 2% after sliding 23% this year. The dollar amount of construction for this sector will edge up 1%, helped by a growing amount of energy-efficiency upgrades to federal buildings and continued strength for military buildings.

• Manufacturing buildings will drop 14% in dollars and 3% in square feet, hampered by the substantial amount of slack manufacturing capacity.

• Public works construction is expected to rise 14%, given more wide-ranging strength across all project types.