LATEST NEWS
January 17, 2013
Canadian construction work remains steady in 2013, according to report
According to BTY Group’s annual Market Intelligence Report on construction costs across Canada, private sector spending and infrastructure maintenance are the major factors that will help keep construction workloads steady with minimal cost increases in 2013.
“We expect reasonably healthy levels of activity across Canada despite a residential slowdown across most of the country and lower than expected growth in the U.S.,” said Joe Rekab, managing partner at BTY Group. “Strong private sector investment in energy, resource and commercial-retail – with continued infrastructure spending – should offset a cooling housing market in ever province except B.C. and Alberta.”
In eastern Canada, Ontario will see a stable workload, supported by a bounce back in commercial development and a sustained infrastructure program.
Quebec will remain steady, with help from investment in health care, transportation and multibillion-dollar mining and energy projects.
| MOST POPULAR STORIES |
- Concrete parking building repairs could save costs
- New Pickering airport to help move growing population
- Man fined in construction site death of 12 year old Nova Scotia boy
- SNC-Lavalin hopes Algeria police raid will help to shed light on wrong
- New venue in St. Catharines to be the city’s first Gold-Seal project
- 20 Most Popular Stories
| TODAY’S TOP CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS |
These projects have been selected from 544 projects with a total value of $1,665,691,502 that Reed Construction Data Building Reports reported on Tuesday.
$44,000,000 Sault Ste Marie ON Tenders
CONDOMINIUM APARTMENT TOWER, RETAIL BUILDING
$40,000,000 Toronto ON Negotiated
RESIDENTIAL DEVELOPMENT, GOLF CLUB
$35,000,000 Newmarket ON Prebid
| CURRENT STORIES |
- Infrastructure funding will boost economy: RCCAO
- Plant, Prep and Serve
- McManus to increase interaction in new OSWCA role
- Trade infrastructure funding study could grow economy
- U.S. housing starts remain on the upswing after strong May
- First set of arches installed on precast network arch bridge
- Toronto and Hamilton area roads make up half of CAA's worst roads list
- Crystal Clear
- Regina looking to annex adjacent land
- Pipeline oil spill highlighted during twinning debate
- Consulting engineers gathering in Lake Louise, Alberta
- Biased specs grounds for RFP redraft
- Incoming chair looks to the future
- Foreign worker court case led to reforms
- Shell Canada gets approvals for pipelines and gas well
- B.C. building permits rise, but Alberta declines
- Electronic migration
- Unauthorized water system shut down in Alberta
| ALEX’S ECONOMICS BLOG |

Reed Construction Data Canada’s Chief Economist Alex Carrick discusses current developments in the North American economic environment with emphasis on the construction industry.
- An Overview of Prices and Sales in the Diverging U.S. and Canadian Housing Markets (April 25, 2013)
- Canada’s Precarious Dependence on the Commodity Price Super-Cycle (April 22, 2013)
- Twenty major upcoming residential and transportation terminal construction projects - April 2013 (April 15, 2013)
- More








