Construction News

Sun August 04 2024

Related Information

Slow start for 2011

14 Feb 11 Construction project starts in January 2011 recovered slightly from the bashing they took from the heavy snow of the previous two months but are still down on 2010.

The latest Glenigan Index shows that project starts for the three months to January 2011 fell by 28% compared to the same period a year before.

"The fall in project starts is largely due to the severe December weather. However, while the industry has made up some of the lost ground over the last month, January starts were still much weaker than a year ago," said Glenigan economist James Abraham.
Residential projects were 39% down over the three months, with private housing falling by 47% and social housing by 27%. "While housebuilders deferred project starts in recent months in response to poor weather and weak consumer confidence, Glenigan expect private housing developments to return to growth by the end of 2011. In contrast social housing will remain subdued due to government cuts" said Abraham.

Non-residential project starts were 23% down. "Retail construction starts halved, having been an industry bright spot throughout 2010. Hotel and leisure construction starts fell by a third in the three months to January after defying the harsh December weather to register growth in Q4 of 2010," said Abraham.

Related Information

Glenigan forecasts that non-residential construction will grow over the second half of 2011 as falling vacancy rates and increasing rental values lift office and industrial construction, offsetting a weakening in government funded areas such as health and education.
Civil engineering project starts were 22% lower than the same period twelve months ago with utilities projects starts now declining faster than infrastructure.

"Near term the flow of civil engineering projects is expected to remain weak. However, the Department for Transport fared relatively well in the government spending review which will support investment in areas such rail. In addition increased investment by regulated utilities and the energy sector will also lift project starts over the longer term," said Abraham.

Yorkshire and the Humber suffered the largest regional fall (49%) with the value of new work starting on site almost half that over the three months to January compared to a year ago. Scotland, Northern Ireland and the Northwest of England experienced a fall in the value of project starts of 32%, 31% and 34% respectively. The East of England saw a 3% fall in project starts, the lowest of any region.

Got a story? Email news@theconstructionindex.co.uk

MPU
MPU

Click here to view latest construction news »