Real Estate

Bad news for commercial real estate: Architects report a big drop in business


Construction workers erect a building in downtown Miami, Florida, on June 14, 2023. 

Jim Watson | AFP | Getty Images

Architecture firms reported a sharp drop in business in September, indicating that the commercial real estate market could experience even more pain in the next year.

The AIA/Deltek Architecture Billings Index dropped to 44.8 in September, the lowest score since December 2020, during the height of the Covid-19 pandemic. Any score below 50 indicates worsening business conditions. The score shows a growing number of architecture firms are reporting a drop in billings.

The index is a forward-looking indicator of demand for nonresidential construction activity — both commercial and industrial buildings. It aims to predict construction activity nine to 12 months out.

“While more firms are reporting a decrease in billings, the report also shows the hesitance among clients to commit to new projects with a slump in newly signed design contracts,” said Kermit Baker, AIA’s chief economist. “As a result, backlogs at architecture firms fell to 6.5 months on average in the third quarter, their lowest level since the fourth quarter of 2021.”

Commercial real estate has been hit with a double whammy. Return to office is slow, hitting both office buildings as well as the retail stores and restaurants that support them. Downtowns are suffering. But a sharp rise in interest rates has exacerbated the problem, causing investments and deal-making in most sectors to grind to a halt.

While all regions of the country are experiencing a decline, the West is deepest, as the return to office there has been slower than in other areas. Among real estate sectors, firms with a multifamily residential focus saw more of a decline. Multifamily construction boomed over the past few years, with a record number of units now flooding the market and putting pressure on rents.

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Analysts, however, warn that the drop in apartment activity does not bode well for the future.

“I’ll say again, we do need to absorb a lot of multifamily construction currently in place but after that, there won’t be much for a few years after,” said Peter Boockvar, chief investment officer at Bleakley Financial Group.

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