Construction Management is the highest circulation construction-based publication serving the UK built environment.
News
Construction output slows after record growth
Image: Dreamstime/Balakate
Construction output slowed by 3% in August following record monthly growth of 21.8% in June 2020, according to the latest official government figures.
Growth in construction was a record 18.5% in the three
months to August 2020 compared to the previous three months, the Office for
National Statistics said. That growth followed 10 consecutive months of
decline. Growth was driven by record three-month on three-month increases in
both new work (17.5%) and maintenance (20.3%).
But output decelerated in August. The level of output during
the month remains 10.8% below the February 2020 level.
This is not a paywall. Registration allows us to enhance your experience across Construction Management and ensure we deliver you quality editorial content.
Registering also means you can manage your own CPDs, comments, newsletter sign-ups and privacy settings.
The growth in August 2020 is the fourth consecutive month of growth since the record monthly decline of 41.2% in April 2020 since records began in January 2010. That was followed by growth of 9.1% in May, 21.8% in June, 17.2% in July and 3% in August.
Source: ONS
Commenting on the figures, Clive Docwra, managing director of property and construction agency McBains, said: “The construction industry will welcome these figures which show a fourth consecutive month of growth since the record low of April. But after construction output picked up significantly in June and July, today’s figures – which show growth slowing to 3% – bear out just how shaky the foundations are for the industry at the current time.
“Output still remains well below its pre-pandemic levels and
although private new housing work showed strong growth, new industrial and
commercial work is still declining.
“The unpredictability around further lockdowns is causing private commercial investors to remain cautious of committing to new developments. The government needs to ramp up its public infrastructure programme and speed up procurement to help tide the sector over while this fragility persists.”
The CM March 2026 issue of Construction Management magazine is now available to read in digital format.
Powered Access
CM, in partnership with IPAF, has launched a new survey to explore the industry’s views and experiences with powered access machines on construction projects.
This is not a first step towards a paywall. We need readers to register with us to help sustain creation of quality editorial content on Construction Management. Registering also means you can manage your own CPDs, comments, newsletter sign-ups and privacy settings. Thank you.