Building cost index points to US stability

Premium Content

16 September 2009

The Turner Building Cost Index that measures non-residential building construction costs in the US decreased by -2% in the third quarter of this year compared to a -3.3% decline in the second quarter and a -5.7% decrease in the first.

While construction costs have decreased by -11% since the beginning of 2009, the indications are that the decline is now slowing.

Karl Almstead, Turner Construction's vice president who compiles the index said, "With construction starts down in most sectors, market competition continues to drive declines in construction costs. However, global and domestic economies appear to be stabilising.

"Countering the cost decline, material and commodity prices have generally remained level, with the exception of non-ferrous metals, for which prices have risen as a result of global demand," said Mr Almstead.

Southwest Industrial Rigging gets new owner and leadership team
Entering a new era but aspiring to continue Harry Baker’s legacy
Trail King debuts automatic kingpin steering trailers
New trio hailed as a fundamental shift in heavy-haul equipment design
How a modular test system overcame a genset bottleneck
When rising demand threatened to outpace a genset manufacturer’s testing capacity, a modular test cell bridged the gap – and laid the groundwork for future growth.