Green building in US up 50 percent in past two years

Tuesday, 16 November 2010 20:22:24 (GMT+3)   |  
       

McGraw-Hill Construction announced Friday that the value of green building construction starts was up 50 percent from 2008 to 2010- from $42 billion to $55 billion-$71 billion- and represents 25 percent of all new construction activity in 2010. According to projections, the green building market size is expected to reach $135 billion by 2015.

Green building is the bright spot in an otherwise tough economy, and in some sectors, that rate of growth has been remarkable. In nonresidential building, for example, the green building market share is even higher than the overall market. Today, a third of all new nonresidential construction is green- a $54 billion market opportunity. In five years, nonresidential green building activity is expected to triple, representing $120 billion to $145 billion in new construction (40 percent-48 percent of the nonresidential market) and $14 billion to $18 billion in major retrofit and renovation projects.

To break it down further, health care construction this year is expected to grow its green share to as much as 40 percent (valued at $8 billion-$9 billion in 2010)- phenomenal growth in just two years. Education (valued at $13 billion-$16 billion in 2010) and office green construction (valued at $7 billion-$8 billion in 2010) also remain strong sectors, showing high increases in market share, due in part to the fact that bigger projects are the most likely to "go green." This year, the US Green Building Council's LEED specification is mentioned in 71 percent of all projects valued at over $50 million.

"It's an amazing area of opportunity at time when the construction market is extremely challenged," said Harvey M. Bernstein, vice president, Global Thought Leadership and Business Development, McGraw-Hill Construction. "In today's economy, firms that specialize in green or serve this market are seeing a tremendous advantage- and they're doing good at the same time. Green building leads to healthier places for us to live and work in, lower energy and water use, and better profitability."

Beyond these bottom-line advantages, McGraw-Hill Construction attributes green building's rapid expansion to owners' desire for market differentiation, growing public awareness, and an increase in local and federal government regulations. As of September 2010, green building legislation and initiatives were present in 12 federal agencies and 33 states, and the proliferation of local government initiatives have increased at an especially impressive pace- from 156 localities in 2008 to 384 localities in 2010.

"The Green Outlook is one example of how McGraw-Hill Construction's data helps our customers see opportunities despite a challenged construction environment," said Keith Fox, president, McGraw-Hill Construction. "Identifying key trends- ahead of the curve- helps our customers improve their bottom-line and gain a competitive advantage-an advantage that will be even greater when we see the full rebound of the commercial construction market."


Similar articles

US residential building permits, housing starts and completions decline in March

16 Apr | Steel News

US construction industry adds 39,000 jobs in March

05 Apr | Steel News

US construction spending down 0.3 percent in February

01 Apr | Steel News

US new home sales down 0.3 percent in February

25 Mar | Steel News

US residential building permits, housing starts and completions all rise in February

19 Mar | Steel News

US construction sector adds 23,000 jobs in February

08 Mar | Steel News

US construction spending down 0.2 percent in January

01 Mar | Steel News

US new home sales up 1.5 percent in January

26 Feb | Steel News

US residential building permits, housing starts and completions all decline in January

16 Feb | Steel News

US construction employment adds 11,000 jobs in January

05 Feb | Steel News