Tuesday, 25 March 2014

News for Building Designers - Updates to Autodesk FormIt and Autodesk Dynamo

Posted by Unknown On 23:40 No comments

Two announcements impacting the building design industry were showcased today at Autodesk University.  The first is an expansion of the Autodesk FormIt family of applications with a new beta version for Mac and PC web browsers (Chrome and Firefox). FormIt for web browsers joins previously available versions for Apple iPad and Android tablets, expanding the options for conceptual design anytime, anywhere.

Last year at AU, Autodesk Formit was released, making it the first BIM-based conceptual design tool for architects working with Apple iPads. Once a FormIt conceptual design is complete the model can be imported into Autodesk Revit for continued development within a BIM workflow.

This evolving product line provides architects and designers with more flexibility and options to create, collaborate, and share initial design ideas using sophisticated but easy-to-use tools and the power of Autodesk 360 cloud services.

FormIt for iPad has been redesigned to take advantage of Apple’s iOS 7. Users can now benefit from the use of Airdrop and Print functionality, plus new social sharing capabilities. New drawing features, including a spline tool, have been added to enable a larger variety of forms for users to explore.

The recently updated iPad version also includes groundbreaking mobile energy analysis tools powered by Autodesk Green Building Studio, which enable users to get a simple indication of their model’s potential building performance cost based on climate data, building type, and building size. This tool helps designers and architects bring energy analysis into the earliest stages of a design process.

EnergyAnalysis-iPad
Formit for iPad is now iOS 7 optimized and includes new energy analysis features that help users understand potential building performance cost.

What’s New in FormIt Mobile

Building Program in Autodesk FormIt Mobile

In addition, Autodesk today offered a glimpse of what the future holds in store for FormIt, including a demonstration of a forthcoming feature in the FormIt family of applications that supports real-time collaboration on projects. Utilizing the power of Autodesk 360 cloud services future designers will be able to simultaneously access and collaborate on models using their FormIt application of choice.  As teams work through design ideas models are instantaneously updated across all applications to reflect changes made by any user. This revolution in conceptual design will help to speed up iteration, promote creativity, and enable a smoother collaboration process between designers working in geographically dispersed offices, at home, or in the field.

See preview of forthcoming feature in the FormIt family of applications to support real-time collaboration on projects

Download the latest Autodesk FormIt offerings from the Apple App Store, Google Play, or visit www.autodeskformit.com to try it today.

In parallel with the expansion of the Autodesk FormIt family of applications, Autodesk also announced a major enhancement in computational design for the building industry with the merging of Dynamo with Autodesk DesignScript. 

Announced at the AIA Conference in June 2013, Autodesk’s open source Dynamo Visual Programming environment for BIM allows designers to extend the parametric capabilities of Autodesk Revit software by adding their own custom rules and relationships. Autodesk DesignScript is a powerful, compact programming language and computational engine intended to help designers build and analyze complex geometric models that would be difficult to model with interactive techniques.

Now both are coming together in Dynamo to deliver “computational BIM.”  DesignScript’s powerful computational engine and compact language are being integrated into Dynamo's Visual Programming environment on top of Revit. Designers familiar with Visual Programming and scripting can now control Revit models and work more closely with their BIM colleagues. 

Dynamo_01
DesignScript’s powerful computational engine and compact language are being integrated into Dynamo's Visual Programming environment to bring you computational BIM

For more about the new Dynamo 0.6.2 visit the Dynamo website.


View the original article here

News for Building Designers - Updates to Autodesk FormIt and Autodesk Dynamo

Posted by Unknown On 23:34 No comments

Two announcements impacting the building design industry were showcased today at Autodesk University.  The first is an expansion of the Autodesk FormIt family of applications with a new beta version for Mac and PC web browsers (Chrome and Firefox). FormIt for web browsers joins previously available versions for Apple iPad and Android tablets, expanding the options for conceptual design anytime, anywhere.

Last year at AU, Autodesk Formit was released, making it the first BIM-based conceptual design tool for architects working with Apple iPads. Once a FormIt conceptual design is complete the model can be imported into Autodesk Revit for continued development within a BIM workflow.

This evolving product line provides architects and designers with more flexibility and options to create, collaborate, and share initial design ideas using sophisticated but easy-to-use tools and the power of Autodesk 360 cloud services.

FormIt for iPad has been redesigned to take advantage of Apple’s iOS 7. Users can now benefit from the use of Airdrop and Print functionality, plus new social sharing capabilities. New drawing features, including a spline tool, have been added to enable a larger variety of forms for users to explore.

The recently updated iPad version also includes groundbreaking mobile energy analysis tools powered by Autodesk Green Building Studio, which enable users to get a simple indication of their model’s potential building performance cost based on climate data, building type, and building size. This tool helps designers and architects bring energy analysis into the earliest stages of a design process.

EnergyAnalysis-iPad
Formit for iPad is now iOS 7 optimized and includes new energy analysis features that help users understand potential building performance cost.

What’s New in FormIt Mobile

Building Program in Autodesk FormIt Mobile

In addition, Autodesk today offered a glimpse of what the future holds in store for FormIt, including a demonstration of a forthcoming feature in the FormIt family of applications that supports real-time collaboration on projects. Utilizing the power of Autodesk 360 cloud services future designers will be able to simultaneously access and collaborate on models using their FormIt application of choice.  As teams work through design ideas models are instantaneously updated across all applications to reflect changes made by any user. This revolution in conceptual design will help to speed up iteration, promote creativity, and enable a smoother collaboration process between designers working in geographically dispersed offices, at home, or in the field.

See preview of forthcoming feature in the FormIt family of applications to support real-time collaboration on projects

Download the latest Autodesk FormIt offerings from the Apple App Store, Google Play, or visit www.autodeskformit.com to try it today.

In parallel with the expansion of the Autodesk FormIt family of applications, Autodesk also announced a major enhancement in computational design for the building industry with the merging of Dynamo with Autodesk DesignScript. 

Announced at the AIA Conference in June 2013, Autodesk’s open source Dynamo Visual Programming environment for BIM allows designers to extend the parametric capabilities of Autodesk Revit software by adding their own custom rules and relationships. Autodesk DesignScript is a powerful, compact programming language and computational engine intended to help designers build and analyze complex geometric models that would be difficult to model with interactive techniques.

Now both are coming together in Dynamo to deliver “computational BIM.”  DesignScript’s powerful computational engine and compact language are being integrated into Dynamo's Visual Programming environment on top of Revit. Designers familiar with Visual Programming and scripting can now control Revit models and work more closely with their BIM colleagues. 

Dynamo_01
DesignScript’s powerful computational engine and compact language are being integrated into Dynamo's Visual Programming environment to bring you computational BIM

For more about the new Dynamo 0.6.2 visit the Dynamo website.


View the original article here

Friday, 21 March 2014

Data Model Could Promote Use of Accelerated Bridge Methods

Posted by Unknown On 15:26 No comments

This content is available for purchase. It is FREE of charge for ENR subscribers.

Publication Date: 10/13/2010
Author: Tim Newcomb, with Aileen Cho
Format: HTML


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McGraw-Hill Construction Announces Dodge BuildShare—an Advanced Analytics Platform That Connects AEC Professionals to the Firms Behind the Projects, Delivering Unprecedented "Relationship IQ"

Posted by Unknown On 15:12 No comments

Climate Change Could Double Need for Flood Insurance

Posted by Unknown On 14:57 No comments

By Evan Dick
This article originally appeared on [BuildingGreen.com]

The Federal Emergency Management Agency is concerned that flooding, like this event following Hurricane Irene in Halifax, VT, will threaten much larger geographic areas as a result of extreme weather caused by climate change. This change could both endanger flood zone inhabitants and strain the already overburdened National Flood Insurance Program.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency is concerned that flooding, like this event following Hurricane Irene in Halifax, VT, will threaten much larger geographic areas as a result of extreme weather caused by climate change. This change could both endanger flood zone inhabitants and strain the already overburdened National Flood Insurance Program.

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A long-delayed Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) report warns that rising sea levels and extreme weather caused by climate change may cause a 40–45 percent increase within the next 90 years of U.S. land area vulnerable to flooding.

Expanding floodplains will endanger millions of existing properties not formerly vulnerable to flooding and increase pressure on FEMA’s National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP), which already holds 5.6 million policies protecting property worth $1.2 trillion.

The report, which is to be released later in 2011 but has already received coverage in the New York Times, warns that flood insurance premiums could rise by as much as 70 percent by 2100 and that further new development in coastal cities is extremely risky.

Insurance companies have long understood that rising population in flood-prone areas increases the cost of damage caused by floods. According to this report, insurers will now have to contend with both continued population increases in floodplains and the expansion of floodplains to encompass greater populations.

Copyright 2011 by BuildingGreen Inc.


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New Construction Starts in December Jump 19%; Annual Total for 2010 Slips 2% to $412 Billion

Posted by Unknown On 14:42 No comments

New Construction Starts in December Jump 19%;
Annual Total for 2010 Slips 2% to $412 Billiongoing over blueprints

New York, N.Y. – January 21, 2011 – New construction starts in December climbed 19% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $450.2 billion, according to McGraw-Hill Construction, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies.  Nonresidential building rebounded after a weak November, and nonbuilding construction was lifted by the start of several large electric utility projects.  Meanwhile, residential building in December showed slight growth, continuing the gradual upward trend of recent months.  For 2010 as a whole, total construction starts dropped 2% to $412.5 billion, a less severe decline than the 24% plunge for 2009.

The December statistics produced a reading of 95 for the Dodge Index (2000=100), up from November’s 80.  For all of 2010, the Dodge Index came in at 87.  “The construction start statistics during the past year fluctuated over a set range, with December coming in at the high end of that range while November was at the low end,” stated Robert A. Murray, vice president of economic affairs for McGraw-Hill Construction.  “In effect, the pace of contracting has stabilized, after the steep correction of prior years, although renewed expansion for total construction has yet to take hold given this ongoing up-and-down pattern.  The year 2010 did include some positive developments, such as the initial stage of recovery for housing while the rate of descent for commercial building eased.  However, institutional building lost further momentum, and public works construction began to retreat.  For 2011, overall construction activity would benefit if the U.S. economy can show more solid job growth and loan availability improves, but tight government budgets will remain a constraint.”

Nonresidential building in December climbed 25% to $159.2 billion (annual rate).  Leading the way was a 172% surge for healthcare facilities, which reflected the start of six massive hospital projects valued each at $200 million or greater.  At the top of the list was the $1.0 billion medical center for the University of California at San Francisco, followed by the $690 million Parkland Hospital replacement in Dallas TX.  Transportation terminal work also showed a large increase in December, rising 127%, with the push coming from the start of a $450 million airport terminal modernization at Love Field in Dallas TX.  The educational building category in December rose 7%, helped by the start of the $225 million George W. Bush Presidential Library in Dallas TX, while amusement-related work increased 3%.  Institutional categories that lost momentum in December included public buildings, down 19%; and churches, down 15%.

On the commercial side, office construction in December advanced 56%, aided by the start of four large data centers located in Pryor OK ($300 million), Chaska MN ($100 million), Quincy WA ($36 million), and Forest City NC ($25 million).  Hotel construction in December rose 11%, due to the start of a $100 million hotel renovation project in New York NY.  Store construction in December grew 4%, but warehouse construction fell 35%.  Manufacturing plant construction in December plummeted 68%, following its elevated amount in November.

For 2010 as a whole, nonresidential building dropped 9% to $152.0 billion.  The commercial sector retreated 17%, not as steep as the 43% decline that was reported for 2009.  Store construction fell a relatively moderate 8%, as a steady volume of renovation work partially offset decreased activity for projects classified as new and additions.  The other major commercial categories were not able to show the same resilience, as they registered these 2010 declines – warehouses, down 21%; offices; down 24%; and hotels, down 29%.  The office category in 2010 continued to see large government-related projects reach groundbreaking (such as the $369 million headquarters for the U.S. Coast Guard in Washington DC), although not to the same extent as what took place in 2009.  At the same time, the office category in 2010 received support from more data center work, groundbreaking for several corporate headquarters, and a few instances where deferred projects resumed construction, such as the World Trade Center Tower 3 in New York NY.  Manufacturing plant construction in 2010 fell 15%, a more moderate loss of momentum compared to the 68% slide for 2009.

The institutional sector in 2010 dropped 6%, as tighter fiscal conditions restrained construction for several institutional structure types.  The educational building category fell 6%, reflecting weaker activity for K-12 school construction while university-related projects held steady in dollar terms.  The public buildings category plunged 35%, as groundbreaking for new courthouses and military-related work subsided.  Church construction in 2010 retreated an additional 31%, and amusement-related projects slipped 6%.  On the plus side, healthcare facilities increased 12% in 2010, aided by the start of numerous large hospital projects, as this category began to rebound after its 33% downturn in 2009.  Transportation terminal work in 2010 grew 20%, helped by the start of such massive projects as the $3.0 billion transit hub in lower Manhattan NY and $1.1 billion for terminal work at Los Angeles International Airport.

Residential building in December grew 3% to $128.0 billion (annual rate), showing modest improvement for the fifth straight month after the pullback during the spring and summer.  Single family housing in December edged up 2%, while multifamily housing advanced 7%.  The multifamily projects that reached groundbreaking in December continued to be moderate in scope, compared to the large-scale projects of a few years ago, with the largest December multifamily project being a $72.6 million apartment building in New York NY.

The 2010 amount for residential building was $119.4 billion, up 7%, and a noteworthy change from the decline over the previous four years that saw contracting fall 71% in dollar terms from the 2005 peak.  Single family housing in 2010 registered a dollar volume gain of 6%, following a 23% decline in 2009.  The regional pattern for single family housing in 2010 showed increases for all five regions – the Northeast, up 13%; the South Atlantic, up 9%; the Midwest, up 7%; the West, up 5%; and the South Central, up 2%.  Multifamily housing in 2010 rose 11% in dollar terms, following a 55% decline in 2009.  The regional pattern for multifamily housing also showed increases for all five regions – the West, up 19%; the South Atlantic and South Central, each up 15%; the Midwest, up 14%; and the Northeast, up 1%.  Murray noted, “The first year of recovery for single family housing turned out to be very tentative, as potential homebuyers held back given uncertainty related to the job outlook and home prices.  At the same time, the pickup for multifamily housing was one of the more positive features of the 2010 construction market, and growing interest from developers should help multifamily housing stay on an upward track in 2011.”

Nonbuilding construction in December climbed 29% to $163.0 billion (annual rate), boosted by an exceptionally strong amount of new electric utility projects.  The electric utility category in December soared 227%, lifted by the start of a $1.9 billion transmission line project in California, as well as another $783 million transmission line project in Massachusetts and Connecticut.  Furthermore, several large power plant projects were included as construction starts in December, such as a $500 million solar plant in Arizona, a $350 million gas-fired plant in California, and a $250 million conversion of a coal-fired plant to a biomass-fueled plant in Wisconsin.  The public works categories in December were mixed.  Gains were registered by highway construction, up 7%; and water supply systems, up 26%.  Decreased activity was reported for river/harbor development, down 2%; bridge construction, down 11%; miscellaneous public works (site work, mass transit, pipelines), down 25%; and sewer construction, down 34%.  Despite its December decline, the miscellaneous public works category did include $431 million for subway line related work in New York NY.

For the full year 2010, nonbuilding construction slipped 1% to $141.1 billion.  Public works construction in 2010 fell 4%, retreating after a slight 1% gain in 2009.  This shift reflected fading stimulus support as well as the negative impact from mounting fiscal stress for states and localities.  The environmental project types registered these 2010 declines – river/harbor development, down 16%; sewers, down 14%; and water supply systems, down 4%.  The miscellaneous public works category dropped 7%, as a decreased amount of site work and rail-related projects outweighed an increase for pipelines.  Bridge construction in 2010 eased back 1%, but highway construction (the largest public works category) was still able to post a 3% gain for the year as a whole.  The electric utility category in 2010 bounced back 22% after its 36% downturn in 2009.  The 2010 strength for electric utility construction came from large increases for alternative energy power plants (up 93%) and transmission line projects (up 66%), which more than offset a diminished amount of conventional power plant starts (down 43%).

The 2% decline for total construction starts at the national level in 2010 was the result of a mixed performance at the five region level.  Lower activity for total construction was reported for the South Atlantic, down 11%; the South Central, down 3%; and the Midwest, down 1%.  Greater activity for total construction was reported for the West, up 1%; and the Northeast, up 4%.

December 2010 Construction Starts

DECEMBER 2010 CONSTRUCTION STARTS

MONTHLY SUMMARY OF CONSTRUCTION STARTS
Prepared by McGraw-Hill Construction Research & Analytics

Monthly Construction Starts
Seasonally Adjusted Annual Rates, In Millions of Dollars

The Dodge Index
(2000=100, Seasonally Adjusted)

December 2010.........................................95
November 2010.........................................80

YEAR-TO-DATE CONSTRUCTION STARTS
Unadjusted Totals, In Millions of Dollars

About McGraw-Hill Construction
McGraw-Hill Construction connects people, projects, and products across the design and construction industry. From project and product information to industry news, trends and forecasts, the company provides industry players the tools, resources, and applications that help them save time, money, and energy. Backed by the power of Dodge, Sweets, Architectural Record, Engineering News-Record (ENR), and its Regional Publications, McGraw-Hill Construction serves more than one million customers within the $5.6 trillion global construction community. For more information, visit www.construction.com


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USGBC, LEED Targeted in Class-Action Lawsuit

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USGBC Expands Green Schools Efforts

Posted by Unknown On 14:13 No comments

By Allyson Wendt

Photo: Moshe Zusman Photography, LLC Rick Fedrizzi celebrates the launch of the Center for Green Schools with fourth and fifth grade “Green Team” students Lucie Varga, Addie Alexander, and DeVonte Gordon, at Stoddert Elementary School in Washington, D.C. Rate this project:
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The U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) has launched a new Center for Green Schools, headquartered at its offices in Washington, D.C., to further its efforts to give access to green schools to all students within a generation. Manufacturing giant United Technologies is financing the center with a multi-year, multimillion-dollar commitment.

The new center builds on USGBC’s Green Schools Campaign, launched in 2007. “We decided it was time to put a real timeline to our goals: green schools for everyone within thisgeneration,” says Rachel Gutter, director of the Center for Green Schools. That ambitious timeline, she continues, means ramping up activism, education, and retrofit efforts. “The Center for Green Schools at USGBC is engaging educators in creating sustainable learning environments for their students and applying solid research to inform leadership—from school boards to college presidents—about the benefits of healthy, high-performing schools,” explains Rick Fedrizzi, president, CEO and founding chair of USGBC.

It also means launching significant new projects, including the creation of the Center for Green Schools Fellows, which will provide fully funded, full-time sustainability coordinators to school districts for three years starting in 2011. “A district-wide sustainability initiative isn’t going to be successful until you make ‘green’ someone’s job,” says Gutter. She hopes that the funded positions will become permanent in many places as school districts realize the value of the position and begin paying salaries themselves. The Center for Green Schools will be keeping data on the benefits of the position, which could include savings from energy improvements, increased community awareness and involvement, and better health for students and teachers.

Existing efforts will continue. “We’ve got a track record of extremely successful programs,” says Gutter of USGBC’s three-year campaign. The organization’s push for green schools over the past several years has included political efforts, curriculum development, community education, and the continued development of the LEED for Schools rating system. According to Gutter, the campaign has paid off: 80 percent of the largest school districts in the country have committed to building only green schools in the future.

USGBC has focused its work as much on existing schools as new ones, creating the Green Existing Schools Toolkit for school boards and local officials. Central to these efforts has been the Coalition for Green Schools, a group that includes members of architectural and educational industry associations. Gutter says that one of the Center’s first tasks will be to open up the Coalition to broader participation.

The Center for Green Schools is online at www.centerforgreenschools.org.


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OMA Makes Inroads Into France With Caen Library

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Calatrava-Designed Museum Showcases a Greener Future

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GOP Gains May Squeeze Infrastructure Spending

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This content is available for purchase. It is FREE of charge for ENR subscribers.

Publication Date: 11/3/2010
Author: Tom Ichniowski
Format: HTML


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Election Preview: Infrastructure Views Drive Industry Donations

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Publication Date: 10/20/2010
Author: Pam Hunter
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Education Construction: Heating Up or Cooling Off?

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Education projects are a hot topic in the construction industry, with some states seeing huge spikes in new projects and others facing a decline. Overall, McGraw Hill Construction Dodge found that US education starts decreased 6% in 2011 (vs. 2010) while the value of those project starts fell even lower (down 9%).

So where were the exceptions? Wyoming experienced a 7% increase in total start value while Nevada’s education start value rocketed up 54% vs. 2010. View our infographic to see where your state fell.

Click to view the full image

Education Construction Project Starts


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February Construction Falls 7 Percent

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Press Release

February Construction Falls 7 Percent

March 20, 2012 - New York, NY

At a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $376.0 billion, new construction starts in February dropped 7% from the previous month, according to McGraw-Hill Construction, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies.  The nonbuilding construction sector, comprised of public works and electric utilities, lost considerable momentum in February, and diminished activity was also reported for nonresidential building.  Meanwhile, residential building in February was able to register modest growth.  For the first two months of 2012, total construction starts on an unadjusted basis came in at $52.9 billion, down 14% from a year ago.  For the twelve months ending February 2012 versus the twelve months ending February 2011, which lessens the volatility present in year-to-date comparisons of just two months, total construction starts were down 2%.

The February statistics lowered the Dodge Index to 80 (2000=100), compared to 85 in January.  For 2011 as a whole, the Dodge Index averaged 91.  "The pace of construction starts during the first two months of 2012 was subdued, retreating to the lower end of its recent range," stated Robert A. Murray, vice president of economic affairs for McGraw-Hill Construction.  "Renewed expansion for the construction industry is still struggling to take hold, with gains for a few project types such as multifamily housing being outweighed by declines for project types that are largely publicly financed.  This was especially the case in February, when much of the downward pull came from weakness for public works and institutional building."

Nonbuilding construction in February dropped 16% to $107.8 billion (annual rate). Highway construction plunged 26%, resuming the declining trend that was present for much of 2011 before contracting improved briefly in December and January.  Murray noted, "The factors affecting new construction starts for highways are generally negative – fiscal 2012 appropriations included a 5% cut to the federal-aid highway program, the lift from the federal stimulus act has run its course, states continue to deal with budget constraints, and the funding authority under the existing federal transportation legislation is set to expire on March 31.  While Congress has taken steps to extend the funding authority by considering new transportation measures, such as the $109 billion two-year bill recently passed by the Senate, the uncertainty over the shape and timing of a new transportation package has added another negative to this year’s prospects for highway construction."  Other large declines for public works in February were registered by water supply systems, down 18%; miscellaneous public works (including site work), down 21%; and sewers, down 22%.  The decline for miscellaneous public works was cushioned by $344 million for site work at an oil storage facility in Houston TX.  The two public works categories able to register gains in February were the following – bridges, up 19% with the help of a $162 million railroad bridge in California; and river/harbor development, up 28%.  The electric utilities category in February fell 21%, although the latest month did include several noteworthy projects – an $880 million wind power facility in Texas, a $232 million wind power facility in Michigan, a $186 million wood-fired power plant in New Hampshire, and a $140 million upgrade to a nuclear power plant in California.

Nonresidential building, at $127.6 billion (annual rate), dropped 7% in February.  A large part of the shortfall came from a 22% slide for educational buildings, continuing the descent for this category which has been underway for the past three years.  While February did include groundbreaking for two large high school projects – a $120 million new high school in Cincinnati OH and an $87 million high school addition in Pittsburgh PA, they were not enough to avert a decline for the overall category.  Public buildings (courthouses, detention facilities, and military buildings) weakened further in February, plummeting 46%.  The healthcare facilities category in February decreased 9%, despite groundbreaking for a $335 million medical center replacement project in Joplin MO and a $180 million hospital tower in Oakland CA.  The other institutional categories reported gains in February, including a 22% increase for amusement-related work, which was helped by a $105 million convention center expansion in San Jose CA.  Transportation terminal work in February advanced 45%, helped by the $78 million addition to Terminal B at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston TX and a $44 million renovation project at Grand Central Station in New York NY.

On the commercial side, warehouses and hotels retreated in February, falling 8% and 47% respectively.  Office construction improved 11% in February, reflecting such projects as a $106 million Social Security Administration building in Baltimore MD, a $75 million renovation to the U.S. Department of Commerce building in Washington DC, and a $65 million corporate headquarters in Malvern PA.  Store construction in February was able to advance 35% from a weak January, aided by the start of a $300 million observation restaurant and entertainment venue in Las Vegas NV.  The manufacturing plant category in February increased 9%, boosted by a $99 million upgrade to a solar panel manufacturing plant in Portland OR.

Residential building in February grew 3% to $140.6 billion (annual rate).  Most of the upward push came from multifamily housing, which rebounded 10% after sliding back in January.  Large multifamily projects reported as February starts included a $164 million condominium complex in Santa Monica CA and a $57 million apartment building in Gambrills MD.  Single family housing, up 1%, essentially held steady in February, due to a mixed performance by region – the South Atlantic, up 8%; the Midwest, up 5%; the Northeast, down 1%; the West, down 2%; and the South Central, down 3%.  Murray added, "While single family housing was able to show some gains towards the end of 2011, the early months of 2012 have seen that hesitant improving trend put on hold."

The 14% decline reported for total construction on an unadjusted basis during the first two months of 2012, compared to 2011, was the result of a mixed performance by major sector.  Nonresidential building dropped 17% year-to-date, reflecting this pattern – commercial building, down 9%; institutional building, down 15%; and manufacturing building, down 54%.  Residential building climbed 20% year-to-date, with multifamily housing up 23% while single family housing grew 20% from its very weak amount at the start of last year.  Nonbuilding construction fell 33% year-to-date, due to a 20% retreat for public works and a 56% reduction for electric utilities.  The size of the year-to-date decline for nonbuilding construction was affected by the comparison to elevated activity during the first two months of 2011, which included such large projects as a $2.5 billion solar power facility in California and $2.1 billion for work on the LBJ Freeway in Dallas TX.  By region, total construction starts in the first two months of 2012 showed an increase for one region, with the South Atlantic climbing 7%, while declines were registered by the other four regions – the Midwest, down 2%; the West, down 11%; the Northeast, down 21%; and the South Central, down 32%.

The 2% drop for total construction on a twelve-month moving total basis, meaning the twelve months ending February 2012 versus the twelve months ending February 2011, was the result of this behavior by major sector – nonresidential building, down 3%; residential building, up 8%; and nonbuilding construction, down 10%.  By geography, the twelve months ending February 2012 showed the following performance for total construction – the South Atlantic, up 13%; the West, up 3%; the Northeast and Midwest, each down 8%; and the South Central, down 12%.


About McGraw-Hill Construction:
McGraw-Hill Construction connects people, projects, and products across the construction industry. For more than a century, it has remained North America’s leading provider of project and product information, plans and specifications, and industry news, trends, and forecasts. McGraw-Hill Construction serves more than one million customers in the global construction industry through Dodge, Sweets, Architectural Record, Engineering News-Record, GreenSource, and SNAP. To learn more, visit www.construction.com or follow @mhconstruction on Twitter.

About The McGraw-Hill Companies:
Founded in 1888, The McGraw-Hill Companies is a leading global financial information and education company that helps professionals and students succeed in the knowledge economy. Leading brands include Standard and Poor’s, McGraw-Hill Education, Platts energy information services, and J.D. Power and Associates. The Corporation has approximately 21,000 employees with more than 280 offices in 40 countries. Sales in 2010 were $6.2 billion. Additional information is available at www.mcgraw-hill.com.

February 2012 Construction Starts

MONTHLY SUMMARY OF CONSTRUCTION STARTS


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September Construction Falls 7%

Posted by Unknown On 12:28 No comments

September Construction Falls 7%going over blueprints

New York, N.Y. – October 18, 2010 – New construction starts in September retreated 7% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $405.2 billion, according to McGraw-Hill Construction, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies.  Nonbuilding construction, which is comprised of public works and electric utilities, pulled back following the strong activity reported over the summer.  Meanwhile, both nonresidential building and housing were able to show some improvement in September after their loss of momentum in the preceding month.  For the January-September period of 2010, total construction on an unadjusted basis came in at $314.6 billion, down 3 percent from a year ago.

The September statistics lowered the Dodge Index to 86 (2000=100), compared to 92 in August.  From early 2009 through the present, the Dodge Index has stayed within the range of 81 to 95.  “The monthly pattern shows that construction starts have essentially stabilized at a low level, but have not yet reached the point where renewed expansion is taking hold,” stated Robert A. Murray, vice president of economic affairs for McGraw-Hill Construction.  “For various reasons, a sustained upturn for overall construction activity remains several quarters away.  The lift that had been provided to the public works sector from the stimulus funding is now subsiding.  Vacancy rates for commercial properties remain high, and will be slow to recede given the weak employment picture.  The tough fiscal climate for states and localities is making it more difficult for institutional projects to go ahead.  And, the freeze on home foreclosures may well extend the time needed to correct the imbalances in the housing sector.”

Nonbuilding construction in September plunged 27% to $126.1 billion (annual rate), dropping back after large gains in July (up 25%) and August (up 23%).  The environmental public works categories showed decreased contracting in September, with river/harbor development down 44%, sewers down 37%, and water supply systems down 3%.  The decline for the water supply category was cushioned by the start of a $359 million water treatment plant in Austin TX.  The “miscellaneous” public works category, which includes such diverse project types as pipelines and mass transit, dropped 70% following an August which included $3 billion related to work on a natural gas pipeline in Wyoming, Utah, Nevada, and Oregon.  By contrast, the largest project for the miscellaneous public works category in September was $120 million for light rail work in St. Paul MN.

Highway construction in September was unchanged from August, while bridge construction edged up 2% with the help of a $182 million bridge rehabilitation project in Brooklyn NY.  Electric utility construction in September advanced 5% on top of an already strong amount in August.  September included the start of five large wind farms, located in Idaho ($500 million), Illinois ($250 million), North Dakota ($150 million), Iowa ($150 million), and Nebraska ($90 million).  Also contributing to September’s strong electric utility total was the start of two large gas-fired power plants, valued each at $350 million, located in California and New Jersey.

Nonresidential building, at $162.4 billion (annual rate), climbed 8% in September.  The office category grew 21%, aided by the start of a $290 million corporate headquarters in Melville NY, a $146 million office building in Gaithersburg MD, and $104 million for the office portion of a judicial center in Denver CO.  Hotel construction improved 21% in September from very low activity in August, while store construction advanced 7% with groundbreaking for a $50 million outlet shopping center in Oklahoma City OK.  Despite their September gains, all three commercial categories on a year-to-date basis continued to lag behind last year, with stores down 10%, offices down 25%, and hotels down 38%.  Warehouse construction in September lost further momentum, falling 18%.  The manufacturing plant category in September jumped 58%, reflecting the boost coming from $1.6 billion for an oil refinery expansion in Port Arthur TX, a project which earlier in 2009 had been put on hold.

On the institutional side of the nonresidential market, gains were reported in September for several of the smaller institutional categories.  Transportation terminals surged 73%, helped by $300 million for airport terminal work at San Diego International Airport and $65 million for mass transit terminal work in St. Paul MN.  The amusement category in September increased 34%, boosted by a $400 million renovation project at the Javits Convention Center in New York NY.  The public buildings category in September grew 20%, aided by a $108 million renovation to a federal building in Newark NJ (a project that received federal stimulus funding).  The two largest institutional categories, educational buildings and healthcare facilities, retreated in September, with educational buildings down 13% and healthcare facilities down 3%.  Even with its September drop, the educational building category included groundbreaking for a $142 million library in San Diego CA, plus two large museum projects located in San Francisco CA ($130 million) and Dallas TX ($83 million).

Residential building in September grew 6% to $116.7 billion (annual rate).  Single family housing edged up 1%, but its pace in September was still 16% below its average for the first four months of this year.  On a year-to-date basis, single family housing was up 11% in dollar terms compared to last year, although the lead in recent months has been shrinking.  At the regional level, the year-to-date change for single family housing was the following – the Northeast and South Atlantic, each up 16%; the Midwest, up 12%; the West, up 11%; and the South Central, up 5%.  Murray noted, “The increase for single family housing this year is turning out to be smaller than previously estimated, given the dislocation caused by the expiration of the homebuyer tax credits plus the uncertainty created by this fall’s freeze on foreclosures.”  Multifamily housing in September climbed 30%, regaining the levels registered at the start of the year after decreased contracting over the past three months.  Large multifamily projects that were reported as starts in September included the $100 million renovation of an apartment complex in Brooklyn NY (a project that received federal stimulus support), plus a $75 million condominium tower in Dallas TX.

The 3% decline for total construction on an unadjusted basis during the first nine months of 2010 was the result of varied behavior by major sector.  Nonresidential building fell 11% year-to-date, with commercial building down 20%, manufacturing building down 16%, and institutional building down 7%.  Nonbuilding construction in the first nine months of 2010 slipped 3%, with public works down 1% while electric utilities dropped 11%.  Residential continued to be the one major sector able to show year-to-date growth, advancing 10%.  By geography, total construction during the first nine months of 2010 revealed an increase for one region – the Northeast, up 7%.  Total construction in the Midwest held steady with a year ago,  while total construction declines were reported for the South Central, down 3%; the West, down 6%; and the South Atlantic, down 10%.

September 2010 Construction Starts

SEPTEMBER 2010 CONSTRUCTION STARTS

MONTHLY SUMMARY OF CONSTRUCTION STARTS
Prepared by McGraw-Hill Construction Research & Analytics

Monthly Construction Starts
Seasonally Adjusted Annual Rates, In Millions of Dollars

The Dodge Index
(2000=100, Seasonally Adjusted)

September 2010...................................86
August 2010..........................................92

YEAR-TO-DATE CONSTRUCTION STARTS
Unadjusted Totals, In Millions of Dollars

About McGraw-Hill Construction
McGraw-Hill Construction connects people, projects, and products across the design and construction industry. From project and product information to industry news, trends and forecasts, the company provides industry players the tools, resources, and applications that help them save time, money, and energy. Backed by the power of Dodge, Sweets, Architectural Record, Engineering News-Record (ENR), and its Regional Publications, McGraw-Hill Construction serves more than one million customers within the $5.6 trillion global construction community. For more information, visit www.construction.com


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