If architecture is the canary in the coalmine, the outlook for construction is appalling


If architecture is the canary in the coalmine, the outlook for construction is appalling

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Geoff Hanmer is the Managing Director of ARINA, an architectural consultancy. He has received funding from the NSW Government and from the University of Adelaide. He is a member of the


Australian Institute of Architects. His practice is not a member of the ACA, but the ACA's data has been kindly made available to him by the National President of the ACA, John Held.


A survey of more than 450 architecture practices conducted by the Association of Consulting Architects finds that two thirds have lost more than 30% of their revenue, and eight in ten have


had projects cancelled or put on hold.


Six in ten are relying on JobKeeper. Half have cut pay or working hours. Three in ten have stood down or sacked staff. Only 15% believe they have enough work to see out the year.


In total, the survey finds more than A$10 billion of projects have either been cancelled or put on hold, just among those responding to the survey.


John Held, the National President of the Association of Consulting Architects says


unless there is a more effective stimulus package for construction, the government will need to consider extending JobKeeper beyond its expiry in September to prevent the loss of many


normally-viable architectural practices. Without a pipeline of projects, a substantial rise in unemployment across the whole construction sector will result


Dr Peter Raisbeck, an expert in the building and construction industry at the University of Melbourne, says


two thirds of architects in Australia are small businesses employing less than five people, operating on small profit margins. Widespread insolvencies amongst these vulnerable firms would be


catastrophic


The design professions – architecture and engineering – are the canary in the coalmine for the wider construction industry. If those professions are in a slump now, construction itself will


most probably be in big trouble in three to six months.


The findings are reinforced by forecasts prepared by the Australian Construction Industry Forum.


They show that while engineering construction on projects such as motorways and public transport is likely to hold up reasonably well, residential and non residential construction, already


weak prior to COVID-19, is set to slump over this year and the next, with the brunt of the impact being felt in NSW and Victoria.


The building and construction industry consists of nearly 400,000 businesses that directly employ more than 1.2 million Australians. Most of the supply chain for building materials is in


Australia, particularly for low-rise residential buildings.


The immediate priority should be to ensure that projects continue to be designed and documented to avoid the “valley of death” caused by the need for drawings to be completed before


construction can start.


If eight out of ten architectural practices have projects that have been cancelled or put on hold now, there will be a significant shortage of projects going to tender later in 2020 and in


2021.


Based on the numbers in the surveys, the loss of jobs in construction could add two percentage points to unemployment during 2021.


To overcome the valley of death, something needs to be done to restart projects that have been deferred or cancelled.


To their credit, state and territory governments have brought forward varying amounts of public works projects, including schools, hospitals and a small amount of social housing. In


Victoria, the acceleration of the government’s combustible cladding replacement program is also helping to prop up demand.


Unfortunately, the evidence from the Association of Consulting Architects survey suggests this won’t be enough.


HomeBuilder, the federal government’s $680 million program intended to “save the tradies”, appears to have stalled.


So far, none of the states has finalised an implementation plan for the scheme, perhaps because it was so poorly designed.


In Sydney, where a lot of houses may exceed the $1.5 million value cap, some builders are complaining that the scheme is actually delaying decisions while homeowners wait to see if it will


apply to them.


We can learn from history. The Rudd government’s $3 billion (in today’s money) Building the Education Revolution scheme was successful in stimulating construction and delivering jobs during


the global financial crisis.


The $3 billion Home Insulation Program (later known as the “pink batts” program) also created jobs.


Although there was widespread and justified criticism of how both programs were implemented, they were big enough and quick enough to make a difference to employment. And they delivered


general benefits.


We should be able to learn from these ideas and the mistakes that were made in their implementation.


The Morrison government’s efforts to support the construction industry to date have been too small and too slow. The architects survey suggests the design professions will go over a cliff in


September. The construction forecast suggests that the construction industry will follow them over in 2021.


State and local governments have a long list of useful school, health and community projects that could go ahead now if the federal government made the money available.


Many shovel-ready projects that have been cancelled are in the higher education sector, many of them meant to deliver the STEM graduates or STEM research that the government says it is keen


on.


There is also a crying need for good social housing, made more apparent by developments in Melbourne.


If we learned anything from the global financial crisis, it was that going hard and early worked. It is not too late to do it now, but it will be soon.