Wednesday, March 31, 2010

ENR's First Quarterly Cost Report 2010: Deflation Sweeps Cost Index Board

ENR's First Quarterly Cost Report 2010: Deflation Sweeps Cost Index Board: "Prices for diesel fuel, structural steel, lumber and gypsum-wallboard products started to stir during the first quarter, but most increases were coming off dismal lows in 2009 and were not strong enough to break the stranglehold the recession has on construction costs."

SANAA (Sejima and Nishizawa) Wins 2010 Pritzker Prize

SANAA (Sejima and Nishizawa) Wins 2010 Pritzker Prize: "Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa, partners of Tokyo-based Sejima and Nishizawa and Associates, better known as SANAA, will receive the 2010 Pritzker Prize."

EACOM looks to upturn in U.S. housing and global demand for softwood for growth

EACOM looks to upturn in U.S. housing and global demand for softwood for growth: "

A fledging lumber company is buying Domtar Corp's forest products business, a move that positions EACOM Timber Corp.

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ALASKA IS ONLY STATE TO ADD CONSTRUCTION JOBS BETWEEN FEBRUARY 2009 AND 2010, WHILE 12 STATES POST MONTH-TO-MONTH GAINS

ALASKA IS ONLY STATE TO ADD CONSTRUCTION JOBS BETWEEN FEBRUARY 2009 AND 2010, WHILE 12 STATES POST MONTH-TO-MONTH GAINS: ""

Friday, March 19, 2010

Ross Stores profit bursting its seams

Ross Stores profit bursting its seams: "The Great Recession has been good to discount clothing seller Ross Stores Inc., which reported record profits for the fourth quarter and year ended Jan. 30.


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February Construction Rises 5%

February Construction Rises 5%: "At a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $440.9 billion, new construction starts in February climbed 5% from the previous month, according to McGraw-Hill Construction, a division of The McGraw-Hill Companies."

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

CONSTRUCTION SPENDING FALLS TO LOWEST LEVEL IN SEVEN YEARS, DRIVEN BY NONRESIDENTIAL AND PUBLIC CONSTRUCTION DECLINES

Press Release


Date: March 1, 2010

Federal Construction Investments are Lone Bright Spot in Latest Spending Report, Yet Good News is Offset By 'Disruptive' Expiration of Federal Transportation Program

Construction spending in January fell by $5.5 billion to $884 billion, its lowest level since June 2003, according to an analysis of new federal figures by the Associated General Contractors of America. Declining investments in private-sector non-residential construction and public construction at all levels of government drove the 0.6 percent decline, the association's chief economist Ken Simonson noted.

"What's clear from this data is that the downturn in nonresidential construction spending is far from over," Simonson said. "Federal funding for construction is one of the few crutches propping up a deeply wounded construction industry."

Simonson noted that private nonresidential construction spending declined by 2.1 percent between December and January, and by 20 percent over the past year. Power construction was the only private nonresidential construction category to increase over the past year, by 16 percent, while most other categories declined by double digits, Simonson added.

Simonson noted that two major categories of federally-driven transportation spending, public highway & street construction and other transportation construction, increased by 6 and 18 percent, respectively. In addition, direct federal construction spending increased 1.9 percent in January and 13 percent over the past 12 months to a record $31 billion.

"Federal funding has been giving contractors the lifeline they need to stay in business," Simonson observed. Many construction jobs are now at risk, however, because the federal transportation program expired last night. Without federal funds, total spending on highway and transportation projects is sure to plummet this year, Simonson cautioned.

"Even a temporary halt to the federal transportation program will have a disruptive impact on an industry coping with staggering declines in construction activity," the economist said. "With federal work coming to a halt and many states wondering whether to put their transportation programs on hold, construction layoffs and closures are likely to accelerate."

Association officials urged Congress to act quickly to renew the federal transportation program. "Thousands of construction workers are counting on Congress to fix this problem before they and the entire economy are made to suffer," said Stephen E. Sandherr, the association's chief executive officer.

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linked to you by Tim McCarthy P.E., Engineered Framing Systems, Inc.,(805) 807-7600

CONSTRUCTION SPENDING FALLS TO LOWEST LEVEL IN SEVEN YEARS, DRIVEN BY NONRESIDENTIAL AND PUBLIC CONSTRUCTION DECLINES

CONSTRUCTION SPENDING FALLS TO LOWEST LEVEL IN SEVEN YEARS, DRIVEN BY NONRESIDENTIAL AND PUBLIC CONSTRUCTION DECLINES: ""