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    Brennan breaks ground on new office building - February 2, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    La Crosse company Brennan announced plans Wednesday to build a new office building at its French Island headquarters to support its rapidly-growing marine construction business.

    The 93-year-old family business is actually two companies: Brennan Marine provides harbor services like barge transfer; the larger J.F. Brennan does marine construction, building harbors and dredging channels throughout the eastern United States.

    Brennan's workforce has nearly doubled to about 250 since moving into the field of remediation 10 years ago, said marketing director Glenn Green.

    Industrial cleanup now accounts for up to 70 percent of the company's business, Green said.

    Brennan recently secured a 7-year contract with the federal Environmental Protection Agency that will allow it to be one of a select group of bidders on $150 million worth of cleanup in the Great Lakes.

    The new three-story, 30,000-square-foot office building will allow Brennan to put about 75 local employees under one roof and eliminate several trailers providing temporary office space and accommodate anticipated growth.

    River Architects and Fowler and Hammer, both local companies, are handling the design and construction.

    "This will support well-paid union construction jobs," said Matt Binnsfeld, chief operating officer for J.F. Brennan.

    Gov. Scott Walker was on hand Wednesday to celebrate the expansion and promote his job creation record.

    Read more about the expansion in Thursday's Tribune.

     

    Originally posted here:
    Brennan breaks ground on new office building

    One World Trade Center under construction - February 1, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    One World Trade Center, the central skyscraper at Ground Zero, stands under construction on January 30, 2012 in New York City. The price tag for One World Trade has recently been valued at $3.8 billion, which would make it the world's most expensive new office tower. Most of the cost overruns are due to the security measures being taken in the design of the building which sits on a site that has been bombed twice by terrorists. To offset the costs of One World Trade Center, which is being built by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, higher bridge and tunnel tolls have been instated and there has been a reduction in spending on transportation infrastructure. The 1,776-foot skyscraper is expected to be completed at the end of 2013. Photo: Spencer Platt, Getty Images / 2012 Getty Images

    One World Trade Center, the central skyscraper at Ground Zero,...

    One World Trade Center, the central skyscraper at Ground Zero, stands under construction on January 30, 2012 in New York City. The price tag for One World Trade has recently been valued at $3.8 billion, which would make it the world's most expensive new office tower. Most of the cost overruns are due to the security measures being taken in the design of the building which sits on a site that has been bombed twice by terrorists. To offset the costs of One World Trade Center, which is being built by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, higher bridge and tunnel tolls have been instated and there has been a reduction in spending on transportation infrastructure. The 1,776-foot skyscraper is expected to be completed at the end of 2013. Photo: Spencer Platt, Getty Images / 2012 Getty Images

    One World Trade Center, the central skyscraper at Ground Zero,...

    One World Trade Center, the central skyscraper at Ground Zero, stands under construction on January 30, 2012 in New York City. The price tag for One World Trade has recently been valued at $3.8 billion, which would make it the world's most expensive new office tower. Most of the cost overruns are due to the security measures being taken in the design of the building which sits on a site that has been bombed twice by terrorists. To offset the costs of One World Trade Center, which is being built by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, higher bridge and tunnel tolls have been instated and there has been a reduction in spending on transportation infrastructure. The 1,776-foot skyscraper is expected to be completed at the end of 2013. Photo: Spencer Platt, Getty Images / 2012 Getty Images

    One World Trade Center, the central skyscraper at Ground Zero,...

    One World Trade Center, the central skyscraper at Ground Zero, stands under construction on January 30, 2012 in New York City. The price tag for One World Trade has recently been valued at $3.8 billion, which would make it the world's most expensive new office tower. Most of the cost overruns are due to the security measures being taken in the design of the building which sits on a site that has been bombed twice by terrorists. To offset the costs of One World Trade Center, which is being built by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, higher bridge and tunnel tolls have been instated and there has been a reduction in spending on transportation infrastructure. The 1,776-foot skyscraper is expected to be completed at the end of 2013. Photo: Spencer Platt, Getty Images / 2012 Getty Images

    One World Trade Center, the central skyscraper at Ground Zero,...

    One World Trade Center, the central skyscraper at Ground Zero, stands under construction on January 30, 2012 in New York City. The price tag for One World Trade has recently been valued at $3.8 billion, which would make it the world's most expensive new office tower. Most of the cost overruns are due to the security measures being taken in the design of the building which sits on a site that has been bombed twice by terrorists. To offset the costs of One World Trade Center, which is being built by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, higher bridge and tunnel tolls have been instated and there has been a reduction in spending on transportation infrastructure. The 1,776-foot skyscraper is expected to be completed at the end of 2013. Photo: Spencer Platt, Getty Images / 2012 Getty Images

    One World Trade Center, the central skyscraper at Ground Zero,...

    Two men look up at One World Trade Center, the central skyscraper under construction at Ground Zero on January 30, 2012 in New York City. The price tag for One World Trade has recently been valued at $3.8 billion, which would make it the world's most expensive new office tower. Most of the cost overruns are due to the security measures being taken in the design of the building which sits on a site that has been bombed twice by terrorists. To offset the costs of One World Trade Center, which is being built by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, higher bridge and tunnel tolls have been instated and there has been a reduction in spending on transportation infrastructure. The 1,776-foot skyscraper is expected to be completed at the end of 2013. Photo: Spencer Platt, Getty Images / 2012 Getty Images

    Two men look up at One World Trade Center, the central skyscraper...

    A construction worker takes a break outside of One World Trade Center, the central skyscraper under construction at Ground Zero, on January 30, 2012 in New York City. The price tag for One World Trade has recently been valued at $3.8 billion, which would make it the world's most expensive new office tower. Most of the cost overruns are due to the security measures being taken in the design of the building which sits on a site that has been bombed twice by terrorists. To offset the costs of One World Trade Center, which is being built by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, higher bridge and tunnel tolls have been instated and there has been a reduction in spending on transportation infrastructure. The 1,776-foot skyscraper is expected to be completed at the end of 2013. Photo: Spencer Platt, Getty Images / 2012 Getty Images

    A construction worker takes a break outside of One World Trade...

    One World Trade Center, the central skyscraper at Ground Zero, stands under construction on January 30, 2012 in New York City. The price tag for One World Trade has recently been valued at $3.8 billion, which would make it the world's most expensive new office tower. Most of the cost overruns are due to the security measures being taken in the design of the building which sits on a site that has been bombed twice by terrorists. To offset the costs of One World Trade Center, which is being built by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, higher bridge and tunnel tolls have been instated and there has been a reduction in spending on transportation infrastructure. The 1,776-foot skyscraper is expected to be completed at the end of 2013. Photo: Spencer Platt, Getty Images / 2012 Getty Images

    One World Trade Center, the central skyscraper at Ground Zero,...

    People walk past One World Trade Center, the central skyscraper under construction at Ground Zero, on January 30, 2012 in New York City. The price tag for One World Trade has recently been valued at $3.8 billion, which would make it the world's most expensive new office tower. Most of the cost overruns are due to the security measures being taken in the design of the building which sits on a site that has been bombed twice by terrorists. To offset the costs of One World Trade Center, which is being built by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, higher bridge and tunnel tolls have been instated and there has been a reduction in spending on transportation infrastructure. The 1,776-foot skyscraper is expected to be completed at the end of 2013. Photo: Spencer Platt, Getty Images / 2012 Getty Images

    People walk past One World Trade Center, the central skyscraper...

    A construction worker looks up at One World Trade Center, the central skyscraper under construction at Ground Zero, on January 30, 2012 in New York City. The price tag for One World Trade has recently been valued at $3.8 billion, which would make it the world's most expensive new office tower. Most of the cost overruns are due to the security measures being taken in the design of the building which sits on a site that has been bombed twice by terrorists. To offset the costs of One World Trade Center, which is being built by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, higher bridge and tunnel tolls have been instated and there has been a reduction in spending on transportation infrastructure. The 1,776-foot skyscraper is expected to be completed at the end of 2013. Photo: Spencer Platt, Getty Images / 2012 Getty Images

    A construction worker looks up at One World Trade Center, the...

    One World Trade Center, the central skyscraper at Ground Zero, stands under construction on January 30, 2012 in New York City. The price tag for One World Trade has recently been valued at $3.8 billion, which would make it the world's most expensive new office tower. Most of the cost overruns are due to the security measures being taken in the design of the building which sits on a site that has been bombed twice by terrorists. To offset the costs of One World Trade Center, which is being built by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, higher bridge and tunnel tolls have been instated and there has been a reduction in spending on transportation infrastructure. The 1,776-foot skyscraper is expected to be completed at the end of 2013. Photo: Spencer Platt, Getty Images / 2012 Getty Images

    One World Trade Center, the central skyscraper at Ground Zero,...

    One World Trade Center, the central skyscraper at Ground Zero, stands under construction on January 30, 2012 in New York City. The price tag for One World Trade has recently been valued at $3.8 billion, which would make it the world's most expensive new office tower. Most of the cost overruns are due to the security measures being taken in the design of the building which sits on a site that has been bombed twice by terrorists. To offset the costs of One World Trade Center, which is being built by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, higher bridge and tunnel tolls have been instated and there has been a reduction in spending on transportation infrastructure. The 1,776-foot skyscraper is expected to be completed at the end of 2013. Photo: Spencer Platt, Getty Images / 2012 Getty Images

    One World Trade Center, the central skyscraper at Ground Zero,...

    One World Trade Center, now up to 90 floors, rises above the lower Manhattan skyline and the Hudson River, Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012 in New York. The tower is scheduled to be completed in 2013. Photo: Mark Lennihan, Associated Press / AP

    One World Trade Center, now up to 90 floors, rises above the lower...

    One World Trade Center, now up to 90 floors, rises above the lower Manhattan skyline and the Hudson River, Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012 in New York. The tower is scheduled to be completed in 2013. Photo: Mark Lennihan, Associated Press / AP

    One World Trade Center, now up to 90 floors, rises above the lower...

    One World Trade Center glows in the lower Manhattan skyline, Monday, Jan. 16, 2012 in New York. When completed the skyscraper will be 105 floors and 1776 feet (541 meters). (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan) Photo: Mark Lennihan, Associated Press / AP

    One World Trade Center glows in the lower Manhattan skyline,...

    Continued here:
    One World Trade Center under construction

    Construction Rises as Architects Signal Nonresidential Rebound - January 30, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    January 30, 2012, 3:53 AM
    EST

    By Anna-Louise Jackson and Anthony Feld

    Jan. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Private nonresidential construction may
    pick up this year, as demand grows for new U.S. projects.

    The Architecture Billings Index held at 52 last month, a sign
    of expansion, according to the American Institute of
    Architects. The commercial and industrial component -- a proxy
    for private building activity -- climbed to 54.1 in December,
    the highest in 10 months, the Washington-based association said
    Jan. 18.

    The monthly survey of U.S.-based architecture firms is a
    leading indicator of nonresidential construction, said Kermit
    Baker, chief economist for the association. “Pretty solid
    readings in November and December suggest some modest
    improvement” may be afoot, he said.

    The Federal Reserve echoed that outlook in its Jan. 11 Beige
    Book report, where it noted that demand for nonresidential real
    estate has “improved in a number of districts.”

    Spending on lodging, office, commercial and manufacturing
    buildings grew 8.2 percent in November to $9.2 billion from a
    year ago on a nonseasonally-adjusted basis, data from the
    Census Bureau show. These types of commercial and industrial
    projects are historically the first part of the nonresidential
    industry to improve during economic expansion, Baker said.

    Other indicators -- including vacancy rates -- “are pointing
    toward a modest recovery,” said Rob McCarthy, a Chicago-based
    analyst for Robert W. Baird & Co., who forecasts
    “mid-single-digit growth” for nonresidential spending this
    year.

    Falling Office Vacancies

    U.S. office vacancies fell in the fourth quarter to 17.3
    percent, the lowest since 2009, from 17.4 percent in the prior
    period and 17.6 percent a year earlier, according to Reis Inc.,
    a New York property-research company.

    Inquiries for commercial building projects -- another component
    of the Architecture Billings Index -- also suggest “we are
    likely past trough,” as a multi-year recovery “could begin to
    gain some traction in 2012,” Ann Duignan, a New York- based
    analyst at JPMorgan Chase & Co., wrote in a Jan. 18 report.
    The index of inquiries for new work was 64 in December, after
    reaching an almost five-year high of 65 the previous month, the
    association said.

    This makes stocks of companies that design privately-funded
    projects in industries such as manufacturing and utilities
    particularly attractive, said Burt White, chief investment
    officer at LPL Financial Corp. in Boston. Caterpillar Inc., the
    world’s largest manufacturer of construction and mining
    equipment, is the “poster child” for this industry, he said.

    Beating Estimates

    Caterpillar reported fourth-quarter earnings Jan. 26 that beat
    analysts’ estimates, as revenue in its construction industries
    grew 31 percent, to $5.355 billion, from a year earlier. The
    Peoria, Illinois-based company is forecasting total U.S.
    construction spending “to finally begin to recover” this year
    after declining since 2004, with nonresidential-building
    construction up 5 percent, it said in a statement.

    CNH Global NV, which manufactures agricultural and construction
    equipment, and Oshkosh Corp. are scheduled to report earnings
    for the quarter ended Dec. 31 tomorrow.

    “It’s hard to go wrong with these companies,” said White, who
    helps oversee about $315 billion. “We have a big infrastructure
    and industrial theme in our portfolio right now.”

    For Caterpillar, “demand for construction equipment is
    improving,” as customers continue to rebuild their fleets, it
    said Jan. 26. McCarthy has an “outperform” recommendation on
    the company, which is forecasting that total revenue will be in
    the range of $68 billion to $72 billion this year.

    Earnings ‘Upside’

    Westport, Connecticut-based Terex Corp. and Oshkosh, in
    Oshkosh, Wisconsin, also provide “upside to earnings estimates
    in the mid-term” because of their exposure to the U.S.
    construction industry, Duignan said. She raised these stocks to
    “overweight” from “neutral” earlier this month; McCarthy also
    recently upgraded Terex to “outperform” from “neutral.”

    Shares of Terex, which makes aerial work platforms and cranes,
    and Oshkosh, a commercial-truck manufacturer, have outperformed
    the market by 98 percent and 55 percent since Oct. 3, 2011,
    when the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell to a one-year
    low. This followed almost 7 months of underperformance, when
    Terex and Oshkosh shares lagged behind the S&P 500 by 59
    percent and 43 percent.

    Manitowoc Co., Ingersoll-Rand Plc and Illinois Tool Works Inc.
    also have large end-market exposure to this industry, said
    McCarthy, who maintains “outperform” recommendations on these
    companies. Manitowoc makes cranes used in construction;
    Ingersoll-Rand’s products include air-conditioning systems.

    ‘Mood is Changing’

    The “mood is changing now” for nonresidential construction,
    according to Eaton Corp., and the electrical- products maker is
    forecasting “continued recovery into 2012,” Chairman and Chief
    Executive Officer Alexander Cutler said on a Jan. 26 conference
    call.

    Even so, the Cleveland-based company reported operating
    earnings of $1.08 a share for the period ended Dec. 31, missing
    the average analyst estimate of $1.11, in part because
    customers in its U.S. electrical business delayed shipments,
    Cutler said in a statement. The revenue shortfall probably was
    driven by temporary factors and shouldn’t have “a significant
    impact” on sales this year, he said. McCarthy has an
    “outperform” recommendation on the company.

    Nonresidential construction exhibits “late-cycle” growth
    because the design and building process may take several years
    from inception to completion, said Russell Price, a senior
    economist at Ameriprise Financial Inc. in Detroit. As a result,
    companies planning projects must have confidence in the
    economic outlook, he said.

    “Developers have to see not only that demand has improved, but
    that the improvements are sustainable,” Price said.

    Expanding U.S. Economy

    The U.S. economy grew at a 2.8 percent annual rate in the three
    months ended Dec. 31 after rising 1.8 percent in the previous
    quarter, which was less than the median forecast of 3 percent
    in a Bloomberg News survey. Meanwhile, payrolls expanded by
    200,000 in December, following a revised 100,000 gain in
    November, Labor Department data show.

    “The tone in nonresidential construction is changing” after
    years of pessimism, Price said. “We’re finally starting to see
    this sector perk up.”

    Even so, the jobless rate remains elevated by historic
    standards -- at 8.5 percent in December compared with less than
    5 percent before the 18-month recession began in late 2007
    --and private nonresidential spending is about 33 percent below
    its January 2008 peak, so “there’s still a ways to go,” Price
    said.

    Later Rebound

    Lackluster construction spending is a result of the economy’s
    sluggishness, Baker said. The architecture association’s
    billing index historically has led improvements in building
    activity by about nine to 12 months; because this recovery has
    been so weak, a construction rebound is coming later in the
    economic cycle as “companies don’t need to add new facilities
    until they’re seeing growth,” he said.

    Illinois Tool Works, which makes fasteners, is forecasting a
    “modest recovery” this year, with global growth in its
    construction-products segment between 3 percent and 5 percent,
    Vice Chairman David Parry predicted at the Glenview-based
    company’s Dec. 2 investor meeting. “I think we’ve hit bottom,”
    he said.

    --Editors: Melinda Grenier, Daniel Moss

    To contact the reporters on this story: Anna-Louise Jackson in
    New York at ajackson36@bloomberg.net; Anthony Feld in New York
    at afeld2@bloomberg.net

    To contact the editor responsible for this story: Anthony Feld
    at afeld2@bloomberg.net

    Read the rest here:
    Construction Rises as Architects Signal Nonresidential Rebound

    Construction Resumes At Grist Mill Commons In Simsbury - January 30, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    SIMSBURY—

    — Construction work at Grist Mill Commons, the first
    development to be built using the new "planned area" zoning
    regulation, has started months ahead of time thanks to this
    year's unseasonably warm, dry weather.

    Once completed, the project will add 20 tri-level townhouses,
    88 upscale apartments, a restaurant and office space near the
    corner of West Street and Grist Mill Road. Construction on the
    apartments was originally scheduled to begin this spring.

    Ron Janeczko, developer and partner of Farmington-based
    Landworks Development LLC, said the mild winter weather this
    season has provided an opportunity for construction crews to
    resume work earlier than anticipated. He added that crews have
    already excavated the front portion of the 5-acre parcel where
    the 300-year-old grist and saw mill building sits. Crews were
    also able to get some work in to control drainage.

    The newly renovated restaurant at 77 West St. is expected to
    open within the next couple of months, said Town Planner Hiram
    Peck. Construction crews have been working on a 90-space
    parking lot outside the building, which will also house a new
    office for Landworks Realty, currently based out of Farmington.

    The project, which was unanimously approved by the zoning
    commission on April 4, is the first to be approved under the
    town's planned area development zoning regulation, which went
    into effect in September 2010. It was developed with the
    intention of creating "attractive, livable, environmentally
    wholesome and pedestrian-friendly public spaces" in Simsbury, according to the
    town's website.

    Plans to construct upscale town homes, commercial space and
    apartments perfectly fits into the mixed-use focus of the
    regulation, Peck said.

    "It's exactly keeping with what we had envisioned for the
    town," he said.

    The roughly $30 million project is expected to take another
    2-plus years to complete.

    Five buildings with a total of 20 townhouses are to be built on
    a 2-acre lot adjacent to that of the restaurant. Each will have
    with two bedrooms, a den and two-and-a-half bathrooms and will
    range in size from 1,800 to 2,100 square feet. The development,
    which overlooks the mill pond and gorge, will be called Mill
    Pond Crossing.

    The largest area, about 10.5 acres off Grist Mill Road, will be
    converted into apartments called Grist Mill Commons, Janeczko
    said. Eighty-eight units will be built, of which four will be
    free-standing and 84 single-level with private garages and
    elevator access. Both 1- and 2-bedroom units are included in
    the plans and range in size from 900 to 1,500 square feet.

    "We are building this as if we would be living there," said
    Janeczko, a Farmington resident, in
    reference to his business partner Chris Nelson, also a
    Connecticut native. "We're from here, we live here, we've
    raised our kids here.

    "Our vision is to create a place where people will want to
    live, where they will be happy and comfortable."

    Excerpt from:
    Construction Resumes At Grist Mill Commons In Simsbury

    Construction Rises as Architect Billings Show U.S. Nonresidential Rebound - January 30, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Private nonresidential construction may pick up this year, as
    demand grows for new U.S. projects.

    The Architecture Billings Index held at 52 last month, a sign
    of expansion, according to the American Institute of Architects. The
    commercial and industrial component -- a proxy for private
    building activity -- climbed to 54.1 in December, the highest
    in 10 months, the Washington-based association said Jan. 18.

    The monthly survey of U.S.-based architecture firms is a
    leading indicator of nonresidential construction, said Kermit
    Baker, chief economist for the association. “Pretty solid
    readings in November and December suggest some modest
    improvement” may be afoot, he said.

    The Federal Reserve echoed that outlook in its
    Jan. 11 Beige Book report, where it noted that demand for
    nonresidential real estate has “improved in a number of
    districts.”

    Spending on lodging, office, commercial and manufacturing
    buildings grew 8.2 percent in November to $9.2 billion from a
    year ago on a nonseasonally-adjusted basis, data from the
    Census Bureau show. These types of commercial and industrial
    projects are historically the first part of the nonresidential
    industry to improve during economic expansion, Baker said.

    Other indicators -- including vacancy rates -- “are pointing
    toward a modest recovery,” said Rob McCarthy, a Chicago-based
    analyst for Robert W. Baird & Co., who forecasts
    “mid-single-digit growth” for nonresidential spending this
    year.

    Falling Office Vacancies

    U.S. office vacancies fell in the fourth quarter to 17.3
    percent, the lowest since 2009, from 17.4 percent in the prior
    period and 17.6 percent a year earlier, according to Reis Inc.,
    a New York property-research company.

    Inquiries for commercial building projects -- another component
    of the Architecture Billings Index -- also suggest “we are
    likely past trough,” as a multi-year recovery “could begin to
    gain some traction in 2012,” Ann
    Duignan, a New York- based analyst at JPMorgan Chase &
    Co., wrote in a Jan. 18 report. The index of inquiries for new
    work was 64 in December, after reaching an almost five-year
    high of 65 the previous month, the association said.

    This makes stocks of companies that design privately-funded
    projects in industries such as manufacturing and utilities
    particularly attractive, said Burt White, chief investment
    officer at LPL Financial Corp. in Boston. Caterpillar Inc. (CAT), the world’s largest
    manufacturer of construction and mining equipment, is the
    “poster child” for this industry, he said.

    Beating Estimates

    Caterpillar reported fourth-quarter earnings Jan. 26 that beat
    analysts’ estimates, as revenue in its construction industries
    grew 31 percent, to $5.355 billion, from a year earlier. The
    Peoria, Illinois-based company is forecasting total U.S.
    construction spending “to finally begin to recover” this year
    after declining since 2004, with nonresidential-building
    construction up 5 percent, it said in a statement.

    CNH
    Global NV (CNH), which manufactures agricultural and
    construction equipment, and Oshkosh Corp. (OSK) are scheduled to report
    earnings for the quarter ended Dec. 31 tomorrow.

    “It’s hard to go wrong with these companies,” said White, who
    helps oversee about $315 billion. “We have a big infrastructure
    and industrial theme in our portfolio right now.”

    For Caterpillar, “demand for construction equipment is
    improving,” as customers continue to rebuild their fleets, it
    said Jan. 26. McCarthy has an “outperform” recommendation on
    the company, which is forecasting that total revenue will be in
    the range of $68 billion to $72 billion this year.

    Earnings ‘Upside’

    Westport, Connecticut-based Terex Corp. (TEX) and Oshkosh, in Oshkosh,
    Wisconsin, also provide “upside to earnings
    estimates in the mid-term” because of their exposure to the
    U.S. construction industry, Duignan said. She raised these
    stocks to “overweight” from “neutral” earlier this month;
    McCarthy also recently upgraded Terex to “outperform” from
    “neutral.”

    Shares of Terex, which makes aerial work platforms and cranes,
    and Oshkosh, a commercial-truck manufacturer, have outperformed
    the market by 98 percent and 55 percent since Oct. 3, 2011,
    when the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell to a one-year
    low. This followed almost 7 months of underperformance, when
    Terex and Oshkosh shares lagged behind the S&P
    500 by 59 percent and 43 percent.

    Manitowoc Co. (MTW), Ingersoll-Rand Plc (IR) and Illinois Tool Works Inc. (ITW) also have large
    end-market exposure to this industry, said McCarthy, who
    maintains “outperform” recommendations on these companies.
    Manitowoc makes cranes used in construction; Ingersoll-Rand’s
    products include air-conditioning systems.

    ‘Mood is Changing’

    The “mood is changing now” for nonresidential construction,
    according to Eaton Corp. (ETN), and the electrical-
    products maker is forecasting “continued recovery into 2012,”
    Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Alexander Cutler said on a
    Jan. 26 conference call.

    Even so, the Cleveland-based company reported operating
    earnings of $1.08 a share for the period ended Dec. 31, missing
    the average analyst estimate of $1.11, in part because
    customers in its U.S. electrical business delayed shipments,
    Cutler said in a statement. The revenue shortfall probably was
    driven by temporary factors and shouldn’t have “a significant
    impact” on sales this year, he said. McCarthy has an
    “outperform” recommendation on the company.

    Nonresidential construction exhibits “late-cycle” growth
    because the design and building process may take several years
    from inception to completion, said Russell Price, a senior economist at Ameriprise
    Financial Inc. in Detroit. As a result, companies planning projects
    must have confidence in the economic outlook, he said.

    “Developers have to see not only that demand has improved, but
    that the improvements are sustainable,” Price said.

    Expanding U.S. Economy

    The U.S. economy grew at a 2.8 percent annual
    rate in the three months ended Dec. 31 after rising 1.8 percent
    in the previous quarter, which was less than the median
    forecast of 3 percent in a Bloomberg News survey. Meanwhile,
    payrolls expanded by 200,000 in December, following a revised
    100,000 gain in November, Labor Department data show.

    “The tone in nonresidential construction is changing” after
    years of pessimism, Price said. “We’re finally starting to see
    this sector perk up.”

    Even so, the jobless rate remains elevated by historic
    standards -- at 8.5 percent
    in December compared with less than 5 percent before the
    18-month recession began in late 2007 --and private
    nonresidential spending is about 33 percent below its January
    2008 peak, so “there’s still a ways to go,” Price said.

    Later Rebound

    Lackluster construction spending is a result of the economy’s
    sluggishness, Baker said. The architecture association’s
    billing index historically has led improvements in building
    activity by about nine to 12 months; because this recovery has
    been so weak, a construction rebound is coming later in the
    economic cycle as “companies don’t need to add new facilities
    until they’re seeing growth,” he said.

    Illinois Tool Works, which makes fasteners, is forecasting a
    “modest recovery” this year, with global growth in its
    construction-products segment between 3 percent and 5 percent,
    Vice Chairman David Parry predicted at the Glenview-based
    company’s Dec. 2 investor meeting. “I think we’ve hit bottom,”
    he said.

    To contact the reporters on this story: Anna-Louise Jackson in
    New York at ajackson36@bloomberg.net;
    Anthony Feld in New York at afeld2@bloomberg.net

    To contact the editor responsible for this story: Anthony Feld
    at afeld2@bloomberg.net

    Read this article:
    Construction Rises as Architect Billings Show U.S. Nonresidential Rebound

    Villagio to add office building to Bragg Boulevard site - January 29, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Another major private investment is planned for Bragg Boulevard
    by the developer of the Villagio luxury apartments.

    Fayetteville businessman Rajan Shamdasani unveiled his plans
    last week for a $3.5 million office building called The
    Palazzo. The three-story building, to be on vacant land in
    front of the apartments, will feature Mediterranean-style
    stucco, a rooftop garden with palm trees and a cupola.

    The upscale building would be in sharp contrast to much of the
    boulevard's landscape of used car dealers, older storefronts
    and empty lots north of Sycamore Dairy Road.

    Shamdasani opened the Villagio apartments last fall. The
    Italian-inspired complex is a $20 million investment, separate
    from the commercial building being proposed.

    In 2009, the city and county awarded tax incentives for the
    apartment complex with a combined worth of about $500,000 over
    five years. Local officials hope the residential project sparks
    a revitalization to the boulevard corridor.

    Shamdasani said he'll apply for additional tax incentives for
    The Palazzo. He hopes to start construction by the end of this
    year. The building will have 31,300 square feet.

    "This building will only enhance the value of what we are doing
    out there and what we are seeing happening on Bragg Boulevard,"
    said Shamdasani, president of American Uniform Sales.

    Already, "for sale" signs have begun popping up along the
    boulevard in the vicinity of Villagio.

    Ranny Nimocks, a commercial real estate agent who has property
    listed on the boulevard, said any new construction has a
    positive impact on property values and attracts other
    development.

    The first phase of Villagio was completed last year. Of the 105
    available units, 81 have been leased, Shamdasani said. Monthly
    rents range from $770 to $1,420. Construction on a second phase
    is expected to begin this summer, with two buildings and a
    total of 132 units.

    Last year, Shamdasani solicited five designs from three firms
    for his commercial building. He received input from people in
    the community and those affiliated with the
    Fayetteville-Cumberland County Chamber of Commerce. They helped
    him select the winning design and name.

    "It was my favorite choice," Shamdasani said.

    He said he has a pending lease contract for the third floor
    penthouse office, and he is looking to lease or sell other
    space in the office building. The cupola is an ode to the
    Market House, he said.

    View original post here:
    Villagio to add office building to Bragg Boulevard site

    Another office building proposed in South Lake Union - January 28, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Originally published January 27, 2012 at
    5:40 PM | Page modified January 27, 2012 at 7:36 PM

    Developer Skanska USA has filed preliminary paperwork for a
    12-story office building on a half block in South Lake Union
    that it bought earlier this week.

    The building, on Fairview Avenue North between Harrison and
    Republican streets, would have about 339,000 square feet of
    office space, shops or restaurants on the ground floor, and
    four or five levels of underground parking, according to city
    records.

    Skanska acquired the one-acre property, now the site of a
    vacant warehouse, for about $11.6 million.

    Zoning now limits buildings on the site to 65 feet, about half
    what Skanska is proposing. But city officials are considering
    zoning changes for South Lake Union that would allow Skanska to
    construct an office building up to 160 feet tall.

    A Skanska spokeswoman said the firm, a subsidiary of a Swedish
    construction giant, hopes to start building next year, but
    couldn't say whether construction would start without a signed
    lead tenant.

    Skanska is the latest firm to join what has become a
    development stampede in Seattle's South Lake Union
    neighborhood.

    Amazon.com[1] is
    completing the last building in its 1.7-million-square-foot
    headquarters complex.

    Spear Street Capital of San Francisco recently broke ground on
    a 130,000-square-foot office/retail building, and Seattle
    developers Touchstone and Vulcan Real Estate are seeking
    permits for office projects totaling another 1 million square
    feet.

    UW Medicine is expanding its South Lake Union research center,
    and another 100,000-square-foot biotech building recently won
    city approval.

    Nearly 400 apartments are under construction in South Lake
    Union, and another 1,300 are in the pipeline.

    Eric Pryne: 206-464-2231 or epryne@seattletimes.com[2]

    References

    1. ^ Amazon.com
      (amazon.com)
    2. ^ epryne@seattletimes.com
      (seattletimes.nwsource.com)

    More:
    Another office building proposed in South Lake Union

    All type of Construction - January 10, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    14-04-2011 03:26 DAMAS Constructions provides comprehensive Residential and Commercial Construction, Architectural Planning, Interior Designing

    Read more:
    All type of Construction

    The New World Trade Center – Video - January 1, 2012 by Mr HomeBuilder

    07-09-2011 12:16 Piranha was commissioned by Silverstein Properties to create a short film depicting the completion of The New World Trade Center site. Piranha wrote, produced, art directed, filmed, and finished all vfx for this inspiring piece marking the 10th year anniversary of 9/11.

    See more here:
    The New World Trade Center - Video

    Pole Barn Shop Construction, Eugene, OR, Greg Stallings Construction – Video - December 31, 2011 by Mr HomeBuilder

    13-01-2011 17:37 A step by step look at the construction of a pole building in Eugene, Oregon, by Greg Stallings Construction. Check out more custom Pole Barns at http://www.gregstallingsconstruction.com

    Follow this link:
    Pole Barn Shop Construction, Eugene, OR, Greg Stallings Construction - Video

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