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Contact:
Rubenstein
Justina Lombardo
(212) 843-8343
jlombardo@rubenstein.com

New York Building Congress
Michael Pantelidis
(212) 481-9230 x 125
mpantelidis@buildingcongress.com

The value of New York City construction starts reached $32.2 billion
in 2016, a decline of 22 percent from 2015, according to a New York
Building Congress analysis of construction data from Dodge Data &
Analytics.

While the overall value of last year’s construction starts is down
from $41.1 billion in 2015, the 2016 total easily outpaced the annual
average of $24.1 billion in construction starts achieved during a
five-year period stretching from 2011 through 2015.

“Despite our inability to match the epic pace of new project starts
achieved in 2015, private sector developers and real estate investors
maintained their incredibly bullish outlook on New York City in 2016,”
said New York Building Congress President and CEO Carlo A. Scissura.
“With government work included, the five boroughs have been home to more
than $70 billion in new construction projects over the past two years,
with much of that work continuing to course through our economy today in
the form of new jobs, additional consumer spending, and increased tax
revenue.”

The data used in this report encompass all project starts, including
new ground-up construction, alterations and renovations to existing
structures, and public infrastructure. The data reflect the total
estimated value and square footage of each initiated project throughout
the entire period of construction.

From start to completion, the construction projects initiated in 2016
will encompass 51.3 million square feet of new floor space. That total
is down nearly 38 percent from the 82.2 million square feet of new space
started in 2015, but remains well above the five-year average of 44.4
million square feet in construction projects initiated between 2011 and
2015.

TOP PROJECT STARTS
For the second consecutive year, the top three project starts by value
involved new office construction. The list was headed by 3 Hudson
Boulevard and One Vanderbilt in Manhattan, followed by Tishman Speyer’s
new office project in Long Island City, Queens.

The fourth most valuable project to begin construction last year

Published on

Feb 23, 2017 by New York Building Congress

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