In the first six months of 2022, quarter-to-quarter inflation for construction materials showed signs of easing, but only slightly. “It’s important to clarify that costs are not decreasing; a more accurate description is that [they are] getting expensive less quickly,” stated Dallas-based architecture and construction firm The Beck Group, in its Summer 2022 Biannual Cost Report, which Beck released this week.
Covering January through June of this year, the report combines market data from a variety of sources—including AIA, FMI, McKinsey & Company, Autodesk, Cumming, the Urban Land Institute, and Associated General Contractors of America—with insights from the firm’s preconstruction teams in six markets: Atlanta, Austin, Charlotte, Dallas-Fort Worth, Denver, and the state of Florida.
Market conditions remain challenging nearly everywhere. “Schedule-related constraints are a new norm in today’s market,” The Beck Group contends. “Construction firms are in the middle of suppliers who can’t or won’t commit to pricing longer than 10 days and owners with historically prolonged approval processes. This reality conflicts with the past when it was still possible to hold pricing for upwards of 60 days.”
That being said, The Beck Group claims that the industry is on the cusp of a “new era in collaboration to manage costs and schedules.” That is especially true for developers and owners that bring their AEC partners into projects as early as possible. In its report, The Beck Group offers a list of strategies for managing inflation and supply-chain disruptions that mostly revolve around earlier procurement (see box).
Beck itself creates procurement packages for its clients to secure materials and equipment, a service that involves the firm’s design and construction teams.
DENVER AN EXPENSIVE PLACE TO BUILD IN
On the whole, The Beck Group is seeing significant demand and construction activities in the Sun Belt, in line with the “constant migration” of people and businesses to that region. (It points out, for example, that 43 high-rise towers are under development or construction in Austin.) To keep up with that demand, subcontractors in Texas must rely on imported cement (which, ironically, is among the construction materials least affected by current inflation).
The report takes a deeper dive into the six Sun Belt markets mentioned above, and breaks down project costs by building types—office, healthcare, higher education, faith-based, hospitality, parking, and site work—and their respective sub niches.
The Denver metro is experiencing high demand for multifamily and mixed-use projects. Existing and planned projects are plentiful in the Atlanta market, and subcontractors report substantial backlogs. Building activity in the Florida market remains healthy, bolstered by the state’s economy that is expected to expand by 4 percent between now and 2024. The most significant demand for construction is education, healthcare, and aviation.
Across all building types, it costs more to build or renovate in Denver than in the other five markets, albeit only marginally so in several cases. For example, in healthcare, Denver’s costs per sf for ambulatory surgery centers—ranging from $477 to $583—were around $10 to $25 higher than the other metros. Science and lab buildings cost from $650 to $901 per sf to construct in Denver, versus $631 to $885 in Austin, another S+T hotbed.
The report also compares the cost per key to build or renovate hotels in these six markets, as well as the cost per space for parking and the cost per acre for site development.
CONSTRUCTION EMPLOYMENT STRENGTHENING
The Beck Group report corroborates what other recent studies have been finding: that the construction employment market, nationally, is improving. Beck predicts this trend to continue as higher wages lure more people into the profession. The employment situation might also explain the slight bump in industry confidence that was evident in the first half of the year.
Related Stories
Market Data | May 24, 2017
Design billings increasing entering height of construction season
All regions report positive business conditions.
Market Data | May 24, 2017
The top franchise companies in the construction pipeline
3 franchise companies comprise 65% of all rooms in the Total Pipeline.
Industry Research | May 24, 2017
These buildings paid the highest property taxes in 2016
Office buildings dominate the list, but a residential community climbed as high as number two on the list.
Market Data | May 16, 2017
Construction firms add 5,000 jobs in April
Unemployment down to 4.4%; Specialty trade jobs dip slightly.
Multifamily Housing | May 10, 2017
May 2017 National Apartment Report
Median one-bedroom rent rose to $1,012 in April, the highest it has been since January.
Senior Living Design | May 9, 2017
Designing for a future of limited mobility
There is an accessibility challenge facing the U.S. An estimated 1 in 5 people will be aged 65 or older by 2040.
Industry Research | May 4, 2017
How your AEC firm can go from the shortlist to winning new business
Here are four key lessons to help you close more business.
Engineers | May 3, 2017
At first buoyed by Trump election, U.S. engineers now less optimistic about markets, new survey shows
The first quarter 2017 (Q1/17) of ACEC’s Engineering Business Index (EBI) dipped slightly (0.5 points) to 66.0.
Market Data | May 2, 2017
Nonresidential Spending loses steam after strong start to year
Spending in the segment totaled $708.6 billion on a seasonally adjusted, annualized basis.
Market Data | May 1, 2017
Nonresidential Fixed Investment surges despite sluggish economic in first quarter
Real gross domestic product (GDP) expanded 0.7 percent on a seasonally adjusted annualized rate during the first three months of the year.