Top 10 US metros for construction starts | Construction Dive

2022-07-30 02:30:39 By : Ms. Albee Tan

Despite ongoing challenges like shortages of key materials and labor, rising prices and higher interest rates, the pandemic recovery continues for the construction industry. Growth morphed this year beyond warehouses and single-family housing to include improvement in other commercial sectors as well, according to the Dodge release.

Nationally, combined multifamily and commercial starts increased 18% in the first half of 2022 to $139.5 billion. Several areas however — Seattle; Los Angeles; Philadelphia; Boston; Nashville, Tennessee; Kansas City, Missouri; Chicago and Minneapolis — posted a decline. San Jose, California, saw the biggest percentage increase at 186% year-over-year growth.

Here are the top 10 metropolitan areas for construction and multifamily starts:

The company’s chief economist said the construction sector is at a crossroads.

“Even though the level of projects currently in planning portends a bright second half to the year, the Federal Reserve’s fight against inflation has taken a toll on the economy and raised concerns that a recession could occur,” said Richard Branch, chief economist for Dodge, in the release. “As a result, construction starts are likely to move sideways over the second half of the year and potentially stall as the calendar shifts into 2023.”

In the top 10 metro areas, commercial and multifamily starts rose a combined 28% in the first six months of 2022.

Included in Dodge’s ranking are office buildings, stores, hotels, warehouses, commercial garages and multifamily housing; not covered are builds like schools, hospitals, convention centers, factories, single family housing, public works and electric utilities

Get the free daily newsletter read by industry experts

Topics covered: commercial, infrastructure, design, green, regulation, multifamily construction, and more.

Contractors are paying more for low-skilled workers but aren’t benefiting from increased productivity, economists say.

The construction industry is relying on tech solutions now more than ever, as it faces a skilled labor crisis and global pandemic.

Subscribe to Construction Dive for top news, trends & analysis

Topics covered: commercial, infrastructure, design, green, regulation, multifamily construction, and more.

Get the free daily newsletter read by industry experts

Topics covered: commercial, infrastructure, design, green, regulation, multifamily construction, and more.

The construction industry is relying on tech solutions now more than ever, as it faces a skilled labor crisis and global pandemic.

Construction companies could become Wall Street’s darlings, armed with strong backlogs and robust infrastructure funding.

The free newsletter covering the top industry headlines

Topics covered: commercial, infrastructure, design, green, regulation, multifamily construction, and more.

ton" on="tap:top.scrollTo(duration=200)" class="scrollToTop">Top