The latest Dodge Momentum Index (DMI) information for March has shown a continued decrease in economic activity, dropping 8.6% to a new score of 164.0 from February's revised total of 179.5.
Over the month, commercial planning fell 3.2%, while institutional planning dropped 17.2%. The decline in commercial performance is attributed by Dodge Construction Network to slow growth in office and hotel planning, while the institutional sector decline is linked to a decline in education planning.
“While strong market fundamentals should support institutional planning this year, this side of the Index is more at risk for a substantive correction after last year’s growth,” explained Sarah Martin, associate director of forecasting for Dodge Construction Network. “Much of the decline on the institutional side is credited to lower levels of education planning. Between February 2023 and February 2024, life science and R&D laboratory projects account for roughly 34% of education planning value, with that share reaching 59% in some months. In March, however, that share dropped to 7%. The surge of lab construction in recent years may lead to decreased planning demand as the market absorbs new supply in 2024. Likely, lower lab volumes will result in education planning returning to its long-run, and more sustainable, average.”
For the month, a total of 14 projects valued at $100 million or more entered planning. The largest commercial projects included the $215 million Microsoft Data Center in San Antonio, Texas, and the $158 million Melrod Data Center Building B in Fredericksburg, Virginia. Meanwhile, the largest institutional projects for the month were the $277 million Trident Health Hospital in Johns Island, South Carolina, and the $220 million Sunset Amphitheater in McKinney, Texas.
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